Keywords

pillai score reliability, sample size effects on vowel overlap, merged-vowel threshold guidelines

Abstract

Since their introduction to sociolinguistics by Hay, Warren, and Drager [(2006). J. Phon. (Modell. Sociophon. Var.) 34(4), 458–484], Pillai scores have become a standard metric for quantifying vowel overlap. However, there is no established threshold value for determining whether two vowels are merged, leading to conflicting ad hoc measures. Furthermore, as a parametric measure, Pillai scores are sensitive to sample size. In this paper, we use generated data from a simulated pair of underlyingly merged vowels to demonstrate (1) larger sample sizes yield reliably more accurate Pillai scores, (2) unequal group sizes across the two vowel classes are irrelevant in the calculation of Pillai scores, and (3) it takes many more data than many sociolinguistic studies typically analyze to return a reliably low Pillai score for underlyingly merged data. We provide some recommendations for maximizing reliability in the use of Pillai scores and provide a formula to assist researchers in determining a reasonable threshold to use as an indicator of merged status given their sample size. We demonstrate these recommendations in action with a case study.

Original Publication Citation

Joseph A. Stanley & Betsy Sneller. “Sample size matters when calculating Pillai scores.” Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 153(1): 54–67. DOI: 10.1121/10.0016757

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2023

Publisher

Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

Language

English

College

Humanities

Department

Linguistics

University Standing at Time of Publication

Assistant Professor

Included in

Linguistics Commons

Share

COinS