In vowels contrasting for height, a large number of articulations covary with tongue height, which is supposed to be the principal bearer of the contrast. However, attempts to link these covarying articulations to tongue movement physiologically have been largely unsuccessful, and the particular pattern of covariation appears to make more sense as a concerted effort to influence the perceived height of F1. The experiments reported here used the Garner interference paradigm, modified to assess the perceptual primacy of stimulus dimensions, to show that the acoustic effects of two of these covarying articulations, velum height (nasalization) and rate of vocal fold vibration (pitch) are integrated perceptually with the acoustic effects of varying tongue height. This perceptual integration suggests that the different articulations are not independently perceived, contrary to the predictions of direct realist theories of speech perception, that articulatory events covary so as to enhance each other’s perceptual effects, and that the surface phonological or initial phonetic representation of vowels might be quite richly specified (contrary to claims of phonetic underspecification