Fix build with bibliography, clarified phonetics
This commit is contained in:
2
build.sh
2
build.sh
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ set -e
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xelatex -shell-escape document.tex
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makeglossaries document
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# BIBINPUTS="$(pwd):" bibtex document
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BIBINPUTS="$(pwd):" biber document
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xelatex -shell-escape document.tex
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echo "Build successful: document.pdf"
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20
document.bib
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20
document.bib
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@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
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@INPROCEEDINGS{10669911,
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author={Hagiwara, Masato and Miron, Marius and Liu, Jen-Yu},
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booktitle={2024 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing Workshops (ICASSPW)},
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title={ISPA: Inter-Species Phonetic Alphabet for Transcribing Animal Sounds},
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year={2024},
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volume={},
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number={},
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pages={828-832},
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keywords={Analytical models;Accuracy;Animals;Biological system modeling;Conferences;Machine learning;Phonetics;bioacoustics;audio representations;transcription;interpretablility},
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doi={10.1109/ICASSPW62465.2024.10669911}}
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@online{BRITWILD_WEASEL_1969,
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author = {The British Library},
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title = {Weasel calls (example 3), Oxfordshire, England},
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organization = {Soundcloud},
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url = {https://soundcloud.com/the-british-library/weasel-oxfordshire?in=the-british-library/sets/british-wildlife-recordings-mammals-and-other-animals},
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urldate = {2026-06-10},
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year = {1969},
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howpublished = {SoundCloud audio}
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}
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BIN
document.pdf
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document.pdf
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@@ -21,11 +21,13 @@
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\usepackage{fancyhdr}
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\usepackage[margin=1in]{geometry}
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\usepackage{hyperref} % Needs to be before glossaries
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\usepackage[section,toc]{glossaries}
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\input{glossary}
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\makeglossaries
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\usepackage{graphicx}
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\usepackage{hyperref}
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\hypersetup{colorlinks=true, linkcolor=blue}
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\usepackage{subcaption}
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@@ -51,9 +53,6 @@
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\newcommand\textphonlit[1]{\textipa{[{#1}]}}
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\newcommand\textphonlitex[1]{\textipa{⟦{#1}⟧}}
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\input{glossary}
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\makeglossaries
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\title{\textsc{Hazn}}
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\author{Nomid Lomysz}
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@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
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\newglossaryentry{Rgb}{
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name=R̗ğb,
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description={
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\textphonlit{ˈʀ̥ˌk͡ʝəβ} — The ancient capital of the Hazn, situated in the western region of the Kuar mountains in Bregogia. Despite formally being a province of the Dyarchy of Bregogia, it is still today the most important Hazn center of the planet.
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\textphonlit{ʀ̥ˌk͡ʝəβ} — The ancient capital of the Hazn, situated in the western region of the Kuar mountains in Bregogia. Despite formally being a province of the Dyarchy of Bregogia, it is still today the most important Hazn center of the planet.
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}
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}
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@@ -12,6 +12,6 @@
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{
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name=ćfs,
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description={
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\textphonlit{ˈʃˌɸːs} — the windy season of strong winds and tornadoes, typical of the Kuar region in Bregogia, home to the first large Hazn society nearby the ancient city of \gls{Rgb}, once their capital.
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\textphonlit{ʃˌɸːs} — the windy season of strong winds and tornadoes, typical of the Kuar region in Bregogia, home to the first large Hazn society nearby the ancient city of \gls{Rgb}, once their capital.
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}
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}
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@@ -11,7 +11,9 @@ I came to the conclusion that you can't `just' have either, if my goal is to mak
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\chapter{Phonetics}
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I am not by far a zoologist or student in any way, so I chose the sounds on the \texttitle{IPA} table that I thought the Hazn would most likely use, and also added some quirky almost unpronounceable ones which humans cannot not easily produce if not by approximation, which is a nice little device for storywriting and the design of an intermediate language.
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While looking up for standards in representing \textquot{animal} or \textquot{alien} sounds with text or \textquot{\texttitle{IPA}-like} systems, I came across an interesting paper~\autocite{10669911}, which aims exactly at this problem, but solves it using notation that while scientifically relevant (of course), might not be the best for the scope of this document.
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For example, the described system tries to precisely \textquot{encode} frequencies and timbre\footnote{Some of the provided examples include wide-range datasets of sounds from whale vocalizations to \texttitle{shiba} dogs barks, clearly much broader than what I'd need to just \textit{give an idea} of what a \textquot{hazn-specific} phoneme would sound like.} using a notation that mimics music sheets for representing sounds\footnote{\texttitle{ISPA-A}: closest to an accurate audio \textquot{transcription}.}, and more \textquot{human-readable} character combinations\footnote{\texttitle{ISPA-F}: actually close to \texttitle{IPA} but a little confusing to me (or whomever comes from \texttitle{IPA}), since it wants to \textit{replace} \texttitle{IPA}, and not just \emph{extend} it, which makes sense for the scope of that research.}, but is not the right pick for this document, since I want human beings to be able to easily approximate the sounds.
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\par I am not by far a zoologist or student in any way, so I chose the sounds on the \texttitle{IPA} table that I thought the Hazn would most likely use, and also added some quirky almost unpronounceable ones which humans cannot not easily produce if not by approximation, which is a nice little device for storywriting and the design of an intermediate language.
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\par Because of that, standard transliteration rules have been created that approximate the actual sounds, which will be indicated by \textphonlitex{X} where \textquot{X} will be the sound in question, mapped in Latin characters with conventions as defined in \autoref{sec:conventions}.
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@@ -22,13 +24,13 @@ For instance, because their muzzle is longer than a human's alveolar ridge, they
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\subsection{IPA Extensions for hazn people}
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\begin{xltabular}{\textwidth}{l|X|X}
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\begin{xltabular}{\textwidth}{l|X|X|X}
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\caption{Articulations} \\
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\toprule
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Name & Notation & Description\\
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Name & Notation & Approximation & Description\\
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\midrule
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\endhead
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\bottomrule
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\endlastfoot
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\textsc{Hissed} & ◌͙͡◌ & A quick, high-pitched modifier (like a weasel's cry) that co-articulates with the preceding sound, creating an acute sibilant quality. Applied as: \textphonlit{χ͙͡◌} \\
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\textsc{Dooked} & \textphonlit{ʁ͡◌᷈} & \textphon{ʁ◌ʷ} & A quick, \textquot{tremoloed} modifier, similar in quality to a weasel's \textquot{dook}~\autocite{BRITWILD_WEASEL_1969}, usually applied to a vowel unless the sound is devoiced or very short, in which case it collapses to \textphon{ɤ}. \\
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\end{xltabular}
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@@ -2,4 +2,6 @@
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% !TeX root = document.tex
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\part{Vocabulary and references}
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\printglossaries
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\glsaddall
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\printglossaries
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