Complete Tutorial
From audio loading to data export in 30 minutes
Overview
This tutorial will guide you through the complete workflow of using Ozen-web for acoustic analysis and annotation. By the end, you’ll know how to:
- Load and explore audio files
- View acoustic features (pitch, formants, intensity)
- Create and edit annotation tiers
- Collect acoustic measurements at specific points
- Export your annotations and data for analysis
Prerequisites:
- Ozen-web running (Getting Started Guide). The GitHub-hosted server should be enough for most purposes.
- A sample audio file (.wav, .flac, .mp3, or .ogg). You can also record yourself.
- Basic familiarity with spectrograms (helpful but not required)
Sample Files
For this tutorial, you can use:
- Your own audio: Any .wav, .flac, .mp3, .ogg file of speech
- Record in-browser: Use the microphone icon to record a few sentences
- Download samples: Example audio files from this documentation
For your first time, use a short file (5-15 seconds) to see results quickly. You can try longer files later.
Tutorial Sections
1. Loading Audio
Learn three ways to load audio files: drag-and-drop, file picker, and microphone recording.
2. Exploring Audio
Navigate the interface with zoom, pan, cursor placement, and audio playback.
3. Acoustic Analysis
Enable and interpret pitch, formants, intensity, and other acoustic overlays.
4. Annotations
Create annotation tiers, add boundaries, edit labels, and use keyboard shortcuts.
5. Data Collection
Add data points to collect acoustic measurements at specific time/frequency locations.
6. Exporting
Export TextGrids, data points (TSV), and audio files for further analysis.
Learning Path
Complete beginner? Follow sections 1-6 in order.
Familiar with spectrograms? Skip to section 3 (Acoustic Analysis) or 4 (Annotations).
Just need annotation? Jump to section 4 (Annotations) and 6 (Exporting).
Just need measurements? Go to sections 3 (Acoustic Analysis) and 5 (Data Collection).
What You’ll Create
By the end of this tutorial, you’ll have:
- ✅ An annotated audio file with multi-tier transcription
- ✅ A TextGrid file (Praat format) for further analysis
- ✅ A TSV file with acoustic measurements and labels
- ✅ Skills to analyze your own research audio
Tips for Success
Use keyboard shortcuts — They’re listed in each section and dramatically speed up your workflow.
Experiment freely — The app has undo/redo (Ctrl+Z / Ctrl+Y), so you can’t break anything.
Save your work — Export your TextGrid and TSV files regularly (section 6) to avoid losing progress.
Need Help?
- Stuck on a step? Check the screenshots in each section
- Want more detail? See the Features Documentation
- Looking for shortcuts? See the Keyboard Shortcuts Reference
Ready to start? Let’s begin with Loading Audio →