![]() ![]() But Praat scripting is even more of a black box than the regular software, with even fewer tutorials online. Say you have a recording half an hour long and you want to extract the duration of all the vowels-a script will take care of that in seconds. This is especially useful if you have a task that you need to do over and over. It actually has its own scripting language, to help automate any function it can do. While the software itself may not be pretty, the visualizations it can produce are professional quality. This is especially true of phoneticians, phonologists, and sociolinguists. Nearly every linguist has used Praat at some point. There are some definite pros for using Praat: With that said, Praat is still a highly sophisticated piece of software under-the-hood. Recent versions seem more stable, but there’s always a small chance of it crashing. It would often crash without warning, meaning you’d lose all your work. In the past, Praat has been notoriously unstable. This is part of the reason we wanted to put together these workshops, with a detailed set of instructions, so that you can use it to your advantage in your own research. There is help within the software itself, but it’s not easy to use. And-this one still boggles my mind-no one has written a decent tutorial. The documentation online is very brief and never has enough detail. It’s not the easiest software to learn how to use. Everything is hidden behind menus and buttons and everything takes a lot of clicks. It is also not the most intuitive software. The icon, which is supposed to look like an ear and lips, probably hasn’t changed since the 90’s when the software was first created. Praat is not the most visually appealing program. I’ll be the first to say that Praat definitely has some negative aspects: In this workshop series, we can only show you how to do a very small number of things because we don’t even know all the ins and outs of Praat, but hopefully you’ll be able to leave the workshop with some skills yourself. Written and maintained by Paul Boersma and David Weenick, Praat has tons of features and can do a very wide range of functions for processing speech. Download the text grid for workshop 3 (14 kb).Praat (Dutch for “talk”) is a free computer software package for the scientific analysis of speech and phonetics.Download the audio file for workshop 3 in FLAC format (16.3 MB).Download the tutorial for workshop 3 in PPTX format (4.28 MB).Download the tutorial for workshop 3 in PDF format (4.2 MB).Measuring the center of gravity of fricatives.Measuring voice quality (jitter, shimmer, HNR).Workshop 3: Measuring phonetic phenomena I Download the scripts used in the tutorial (10 kB)ĭownload Lenz (a program that allows you to type IPA symbols directly into Praat and other programs).ĭownload the Praat syntax highlighting file (installation instructions can be found here). ![]() Download the tutorial and TextGrid for workshop 2 in PowerPoint 2007 format (3.0 MB).Download the tutorial and TextGrid for workshop 2 in PDF format (1.1 MB).How to use specific scripts, such as MaSCoT.Use of other tools ( Notepad with Praat syntax highlighting file).Use of basic scripts when working with TextGrids.Workshop 2: Introduction to Praat scripts Download and install the following fonts: Charis SIL, Charis SIL Compact, Doulos SIL and Doulos SIL Compact (uncompress the ZIP files and copy their contents to C:\Windows\Fonts\, or double click on each of the files inside the ZIPs).If you don't know your computer's architecture, choose the 32-bit version. Download Lenz (a program that allows you to type IPA symbols directly into Praat and other programs).Download the WAV file used in the tutorial (2.3 MB).Download the tutorial and TextGrid for Workshop 1 in PowerPoint 2007 format (9.3 MB).Download the tutorial and TextGrid for Workshop 1 in PDF format (3.3 MB).Phonetic transcription with Praat and Lenz.Creating, modifying and using tiers and intervals.You can also adapt them to your own particular uses, so if you want to translate them into another language, for example, or use the screen shots for your own tutorial, go right ahead. They're published under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License, so you can freely use them for all non-commercial purposes. I've prepared a series of tutorials on Praat (in Spanish) which I use in workshops I teach.
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