Abstract
Motivated by the analysis of a dataset of ultrasound tongue profiles, we present multi-aspect interval-wise testing (IWT), i.e., a local nonparametric inferential technique for functional data embedded in Sobolev spaces. Multi-aspect IWT is a nonparametric procedure that tests differences between groups of functional data, jointly taking into account the curves and their derivatives. Multi-aspect IWT provides adjusted multi-aspect p" role="presentation" id="MathJax-Element-1-Frame">-value functions that can be used to select intervals of the domain that are imputable for the rejection of a null hypothesis. As a result, it can impute the rejection of a functional null hypothesis to specific intervals of the domain and to specific orders of differentiation. We show that the multi-aspect p" role="presentation" id="MathJax-Element-2-Frame">-value functions are provided with a control of the family-wise error rate and that they are consistent. We apply multi-aspect IWT to the analysis of a dataset of tongue profiles recorded for a study on Tyrolean, a German dialect spoken in South Tyrol. We test differences between five different ways of articulating the uvular /r/: vocalized /r/, approximant, fricative, tap, and trill. Multi-aspect IWT-based comparisons result in an informative and detailed representation of the regions of the tongue where a significant difference occurs.