PhonItalia: a phonological lexicon for Italian.

Behav Res Methods

School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, UK,

Published: September 2014

In this article, we present the first open-access lexical database that provides phonological representations for 120,000 Italian word forms. Each of these also includes syllable boundaries and stress markings and a comprehensive range of lexical statistics. Using data derived from this lexicon, we have also generated a set of derived databases and provided estimates of positional frequency use for Italian phonemes, syllables, syllable onsets and codas, and character and phoneme bigrams. These databases are freely available from phonitalia.org. This article describes the methods, content, and summarizing statistics for these databases. In a first application of this database, we also demonstrate how the distribution of phonological substitution errors made by Italian aphasic patients is related to phoneme frequency.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13428-013-0400-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

phonitalia phonological
4
phonological lexicon
4
italian
4
lexicon italian
4
italian article
4
article open-access
4
open-access lexical
4
lexical database
4
database phonological
4
phonological representations
4

Similar Publications

Phonological complexity may be central to the nature of human language. It may shape the distribution of phonemes and phoneme sequences within languages, but also determine age of acquisition and susceptibility to loss in aphasia. We evaluated this claim using frequency statistics derived from a corpus of phonologically transcribed Italian words (phonitalia, available at phonitalia,org), rankings of phoneme age of acquisition (AoA) and rate of phoneme errors in patients with apraxia of speech (AoS) as an indication of articulatory complexity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

PhonItalia: a phonological lexicon for Italian.

Behav Res Methods

September 2014

School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, UK,

In this article, we present the first open-access lexical database that provides phonological representations for 120,000 Italian word forms. Each of these also includes syllable boundaries and stress markings and a comprehensive range of lexical statistics. Using data derived from this lexicon, we have also generated a set of derived databases and provided estimates of positional frequency use for Italian phonemes, syllables, syllable onsets and codas, and character and phoneme bigrams.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!