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Office of Undergraduate Research Home » 2024 Undergraduate Research Symposium Schedules

Found 2 projects

Poster Presentation 1

11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Panãra: Data Analysis and Organization in Indigenous Languages
Presenters
  • Sidney Mahlon Rogers, Senior, English, Linguistics
  • Megan Otani, Sophomore, Linguistics
  • Max Vu, Junior, Linguistics
Mentors
  • Myriam Lapierre, Linguistics
  • Sunkulp Ananthanarayan,
Session
    Poster Session 1
  • MGH Balcony
  • Easel #44
  • 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM

  • Other Linguistics mentored projects (5)
  • Other students mentored by Myriam Lapierre (3)
  • Other students mentored by Sunkulp Ananthanarayan (1)
Panãra: Data Analysis and Organization in Indigenous Languagesclose

Panãra, an Indigenous language native to Brazil, is currently the focus of Dr. Myriam Lapierre, Sunkulp Ananthanarayan, Ella De Falco, and Jessamine Jeter as some of the only linguists to document and conduct a comprehensive study on this language. Our research focuses on streamlining the process of organizing and analyzing field data – specifically in the context of Panãra, though generally applicable to other Indigenous and/or under-researched languages  – for use in future research by Dr. Lapierre and other scholars in the field of linguistics as it applies to Indigenous and minoritized languages. We have digitized the data from the field journals of Dr. Lapierre and the graduate students working with her, and our current focus is on the analysis of verb and sentence construction, via this digitized data, to organize grammatical paradigms into efficient and accessible indexes. We are also compiling and organizing PDF, image, sound, video, and experimental data for use on the California Language Archive (CLA) with a similar focus on efficiency and accessibility. The completion of this research entails the more complex understanding and organization of Panãra sentence and word structure for use in future research, both by Dr. Lapierre and by other scholars, as well as for usage in a Panãra dictionary. Our expected results also involve the creation and organization of the CLA page dedicated to Panãra, with a transparent structure making this data available to a wider audience of both linguists and non-linguists interested in learning more about the language.


Poster Presentation 4

3:45 PM to 5:00 PM
Assessing Size Sound Symbolism in Panãra Zoological Vocabulary
Presenter
  • Adrian Brunke, Freshman, Pre-Humanities
Mentors
  • Myriam Lapierre, Linguistics
  • Sunkulp Ananthanarayan, Linguistics
Session
    Poster Session 4
  • MGH Commons East
  • Easel #37
  • 3:45 PM to 5:00 PM

  • Other Linguistics mentored projects (5)
  • Other students mentored by Myriam Lapierre (3)
  • Other students mentored by Sunkulp Ananthanarayan (1)
Assessing Size Sound Symbolism in Panãra Zoological Vocabularyclose

Sound symbolism is a phenomenon wherein the phonetic forms of certain words iconically represent attributes of the objects, qualities, or events they describe. This study focuses on the sound-meaning link in Panãra animal names, using vocabulary from field notes collected in the Panãra community by Dr. Lapierre the summers of 2015-19 and by Dr. Lapierre and PhD students Ananthanarayan, De Falco, and Jeter the summer of 2023. The Panãra vowel system has a combination of features not present in some more widely studied languages such as English, namely, a back, unrounded series, contrastive length, and contrastive nasality. Using this extensive inventory, I assess strength of size sound symbolism created by nasality, height, vowel length, and backness, as well as the interactions between multiple features. I organize Panãra names for different animals and find the average weight of that species. I calculate the percentage of vowels that have a certain feature in a word and assess the correlation between this percentage and the weight of the species denoted using a regression model. Previous research has shown that front and high vowels are associated with smaller sizes and back and low vowels with larger sizes. I predict that the phonetically central and mid series will be associated with sizes intermediate to the peripheral series. Alongside providing observations from an under-documented language regarding its sound symbolism, findings from this study will help guide the continued lexicographic and field research inquiries into the Panãra language.


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