|
1. |
Phonetics of Intervocalic Consonant Perception: Retrospect and Prospect |
|
Phonetica,
Volume 52,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 1-40
J.M. Pickett,
Timothy Bunnell,
Sally G. Revoile,
Preview
|
PDF (8186KB)
|
|
摘要:
This article reviews the production characteristics and perceptual cues of intervocalic consonants as a background for acoustic studies of consonant perception in fluent speech. Data show that in conversation intervocalic consonants occur much more commonly than consonants in initial or final position; all phonetic features are strongly represented. Production characteristics of intervocalic consonants are seen to depend on the tempo and rhythmic conditions of the syllables of which they are components. At a moderate tempo, consonants in syllable-final position combine with the onset consonant of the following syllable. This affects durational characteristics and may be explained by higher energy efficiency of CV units in production. Phonological phenomena are related to the shifts in syllable position and the temporal compensations of intervocalic consonant production. Studies of consonant perception in fluent context have dealt with tempo of utterance, position in word, and rhythmic pattern, as well as phonemic context. Major phenomena are effects of coarticulation, invariance in consonant perception, and cue interaction and masking. Much evidence suggests a dominance of the perceptual cues in the CV portion of VCCV and VCV sequences. We suggest that exploration of perception variables that affect consonants in fluent context would be expedited by reorienting experimental procedures to employ listener adjustment of stimuli, instead of the traditional phoneme identification and discrimination procedures with large sets of constant stimuli. Most of the relevant literature deals with stop consonants. Lateral, rhotic, and nasal consonants also deserve intensive study because of their very frequent occurrence. Theoretical issues of phoneme perceptual invariance and motor vs. auditory theory of perception are discussed in relation to proposed experiments which vary syllable tempo and stress pattern.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000262027
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1995
数据来源: Karger
|
2. |
Effects of Speaking Rate Changes on Native and Nonnative Speech Production |
|
Phonetica,
Volume 52,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 41-54
Anna Marie Schmidt,
James Emil Flege,
Preview
|
PDF (2341KB)
|
|
摘要:
Twenty monolingual English speakers and 40 native Spanish speakers, who were either relatively proficient or nonproficient in English, produced English /p/ at self-selected normal and fast speaking rates. The native English (NE) subjects showed much the same rate effect on voice onset time (VOT) seen in earlier studies. Native Spanish (NS) subjects who were relatively proficient in pronouncing English used fewer short-lag stops and showed an English-like rate effect on VOT. NS subjects who were relatively nonproficient in English, on the other hand, used more short-lag stops and did not show a significant speaking rate effect on VOT, although they did demonstrate speaking rate effects on vowel duration and phrase duration. Among the NS subjects were 21 whose VOT values closely matched those of the NE subjects at both speaking rates, and who showed a rate effect similar to that found for the NE subjects. Their ability to modify VOT across speaking rates suggested that these NS subjects may have established a phonetic category for English /p/.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000262028
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1995
数据来源: Karger
|
3. |
Libri |
|
Phonetica,
Volume 52,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 55-58
Preview
|
PDF (1443KB)
|
|
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000262029
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1995
数据来源: Karger
|
4. |
Publications Received for Review |
|
Phonetica,
Volume 52,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 59-60
Preview
|
PDF (561KB)
|
|
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000262030
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1995
数据来源: Karger
|
|