7,814 research outputs found
The role of gesture delay in coda /r/ weakening: an articulatory, auditory and acoustic study
The cross-linguistic tendency of coda consonants to weaken, vocalize, or be deleted is shown to
have a phonetic basis, resulting from gesture reduction, or variation in gesture timing. This study
investigates the effects of the timing of the anterior tongue gesture for coda /r/ on acoustics and
perceived strength of rhoticity, making use of two sociolects of Central Scotland (working- and
middle-class) where coda /r/ is weakening and strengthening, respectively. Previous articulatory
analysis revealed a strong tendency for these sociolects to use different coda /r/ tongue configurations—working-
and middle-class speakers tend to use tip/front raised and bunched variants,
respectively; however, this finding does not explain working-class /r/ weakening. A correlational
analysis in the current study showed a robust relationship between anterior lingual gesture timing,
F3, and percept of rhoticity. A linear mixed effects regression analysis showed that both speaker
social class and linguistic factors (word structure and the checked/unchecked status of the prerhotic
vowel) had significant effects on tongue gesture timing and formant values. This study provides further
evidence that gesture delay can be a phonetic mechanism for coda rhotic weakening and apparent
loss, but social class emerges as the dominant factor driving lingual gesture timing variation
NRL tethered balloon measurements at San Nicolas Island during FIRE IFO 1987
An overview is given of the tethered balloon measurements made during the First ISCCP Regional Experiment (FIRE) marine stratocumulus intensive field observations (IFO) at San Nicolas Island in 1987. The instrument utilized on the balloon flights, the 17 flights over a 10 day period, the state of the data analysis, and some preliminary results are described. A goal of the measurements with the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) balloon was to give a unique and greatly improved look at the microphysics of the clear and cloud-topped boundary layer. For this goal, collocated measurements were made of turbulence, aerosol, cloud particles, and meteorology. Two new instruments which were expected to make significant contributions to this effort were the saturation hygrometer, capable of measuring 95 percent less than RH 105 percent (with an accuracy of 0.05 percent near 100 percent) and used for the first time in clouds; and the forward scatter meter which gives in situ LWC measurements at more than 10 Hz. The data set, while unfortunately only partially simultaneous with the bulk of the FIRE stratocumulus observations, is unique and worthwhile in its own right. For the first time accurate RH measurements near 100 percent have been made in-cloud; although, the use of the saturation hygrometer reflected a learning experience which will result is substantially better performance the next time. These measurements were made in conjunction with other microphysical measurements such as aerosol and cloud droplet spectra, and perhaps most important of all, they were all collocated with bivane turbulence measurements thus permitting flux calculations. Thus the analysis of this data set, which consisted of about 50 percent stratocumulus cases including increasing and decreasing partial cloud cover, should lead to new insights on the physical mechanisms which drive the boundary-layer/cloud/turbulence system
Structured Speaker Variability in Spontaneous Japanese Stop Contrast Production
Studies of speaker variability in the realisation of
stop voicing contrasts have demonstrated that differences across speakers are highly structured both
within and across phonetic categories. These studies
have focused on languages with similar voicing systems in scripted speech; it remains unclear how stop
realisation varies in spontaneous speech more generally. This study examines speaker variability in two
acoustic cues to stop voicing–Voice Onset Time and
Voicing During Closure–in a corpus of spontaneous
Japanese, a language undergoing change in its voicing contrast. Whilst speakers vary in both measures,
this variability is highly structured: speakers with
less aspirated stops are more likely to initiate voicing during the closure. However, no corresponding
relationship is observed between how the two cues
are used to mark the contrast. These findings extend previous work to demonstrate the structure of
speaker variability in spontaneous speech
Toward “English” phonetics: variability in the pre-consonantal voicing effect across English dialects and speakers
Recent advances in access to spoken-language corpora and development of speech processing tools have made possible the performance of “large-scale” phonetic and sociolinguistic research. This study illustrates the usefulness of such a large-scale approach—using data from multiple corpora across a range of English dialects, collected, and analyzed with the SPADE project—to examine how the pre-consonantal Voicing Effect (longer vowels before voiced thanvoiceless obstruents, in e.g., bead vs. beat) is realized in spontaneous speech, and varies across dialects and individual speakers. Compared with previous reports of controlled laboratory speech, the Voicing Effect was found to be substantially smaller in spontaneous speech, but still influenced by the expected range of phonetic factors. Dialects of English differed substantially from each other in the size of the Voicing Effect, whilst individual speakers varied little relative to their particular dialect. This study demonstrates the value of large-scale phonetic research as a means of developing our understanding of the structure of speech variability, and illustrates how large-scale studies, such as those carried out within SPADE, can be applied to other questions in phonetic and sociolinguistic research
Toward “English” phonetics: variability in the pre-consonantal voicing effect across English dialects and speakers
Recent advances in access to spoken-language corpora and development of speech processing tools have made possible the performance of “large-scale” phonetic and sociolinguistic research. This study illustrates the usefulness of such a large-scale approach—using data from multiple corpora across a range of English dialects, collected, and analyzed with the SPADE project—to examine how the pre-consonantal Voicing Effect (longer vowels before voiced thanvoiceless obstruents, in e.g., bead vs. beat) is realized in spontaneous speech, and varies across dialects and individual speakers. Compared with previous reports of controlled laboratory speech, the Voicing Effect was found to be substantially smaller in spontaneous speech, but still influenced by the expected range of phonetic factors. Dialects of English differed substantially from each other in the size of the Voicing Effect, whilst individual speakers varied little relative to their particular dialect. This study demonstrates the value of large-scale phonetic research as a means of developing our understanding of the structure of speech variability, and illustrates how large-scale studies, such as those carried out within SPADE, can be applied to other questions in phonetic and sociolinguistic research
Vowel duration and the voicing effect across dialects of English
The ‘voicing effect’ – the durational difference in vowels preceding voiced and voiceless consonants – is a well-documented phenomenon in English, where it plays a key role in the production and perception of the English final voicing contrast. Despite this supposed importance, little is known as to how robust this effect is in spontaneous connected speech, which is itself subject to a range of linguistic factors. Similarly, little attention has focused on variability in the voicing effect across dialects of English, bar analysis of specific varieties. Our findings show that the voicing of the following consonant exhibits a weaker-than-expected effect in spontaneous speech, interacting with manner, vowel height, speech
rate, and word frequency. English dialects appear to demonstrate a continuum of potential voicing effect sizes, where varieties with dialect-specific phonological rules exhibit the most extreme values. The results suggest that the voicing effect in English is both substantially weaker than previously assumed in spontaneous connected speech, and subject to a wide range of dialectal variability
The Effects of Syllable and Utterance Position on Tongue Shape and Gestural Magnitude in /l/ and /r/
This paper is an ultrasound-based articulatory study
of the impact of syllable-position and utterance
position on tongue shape and tongue-gesture
magnitude in liquid consonants in American, Irish
and Scottish English. Mixed effects modelling was
used to analyse variation in normalised tonguegesture magnitude for /r/ and /l/ in syllable-onset and
coda position and in utterance-initial, medial and final
position. Variation between onset and coda mean
midsagittal tongue surfaces was also quantified using
normalised root-mean-square distances, and patterns
of articulatory onset-coda allophony were identified.
Despite the fact that some speakers in all varieties
used tip-up /r/ in syllable-onset position and bunched
/r/ in coda position, RMS distance results show
greater degrees of similarity between onset and coda
/r/ than between onset and coda /l/. Gesture
magnitude was significantly reduced for both /l/ and
/r/ in coda position. Utterance position had a
significant effect on /l/ only
Quasi-phonemic contrast and the fuzzy inventory: examples from Scottish English
This series consists of unpublished working-
papers. They are not final versions and may be
superseded by publication in journal or book
form, which should be cited in preference.
All rights remain with the author(s) at this stage,
and circulation of a work in progress in this series
does not prejudice its later publication.
Comments to authors are welcome.
A draft of a chapter to appear in Peter Avery,Elan B. Dresher and Keren Rice (eds.). Contrast: perception and acquisition: selected papers from the second international conference in contrast in phonology. Toronto: Mouton de Gruyter / University of Toronto, due for publication 2006-2007.In this article we propose that contrast must be treated as a gradient phenomenon at the phonological level, with membership of a phonemic inventory being a matter of
degree. This is because, though minimal pairs provide simple and strong evidence of contrast, things are not always so straightforward. Defining minimal- is one
challenge; as is determining which aspects of a contrast are distinctive and which redundant. Non-phonological information is sometimes a necessary consideration.
These complications are usually thought to affect the analysis of a phenomenon in a discrete way, tipping the binary balance held by the phonologist towards either one
analysis or another. We, on the other hand, see the necessity of evaluating contrastive evidence and of taking other linguistic information into account as being an indication that contrastiveness is a scalar property. We address some patterns in the sound system of Scottish English; ones which provide less than clear evidence of
phonemicity - or, as we think, evidence of less than clear phonemicity.caslpub150pu
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