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1. |
Editorial / Contents, Vol. 43, No. 1-3, 1986 |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 1-5
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PDF (703KB)
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ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261756
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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2. |
Preface |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 7-10
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PDF (1402KB)
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ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261757
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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3. |
Modelling French Micromelody: Analysis and Synthesis |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 11-30
A. Di Cristo,
D.J. Hirst,
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PDF (3063KB)
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摘要:
Research into microvariations of fundamental frequency (F0) of speech (intrinsic and co-intrinsic effects) carried out on a large number of languages has brought to light universal tendencies which raise a number of problems, both from the point of view of perception and from that of production, for the interpretation and modelling of intonation. After a survey of these problems, experimental data for French are presented, concerning the intrinsic fundamental frequency (IF0) of oral and nasal vowels and the co-intrinsic effect (CF0) of consonants on the onset and pitch point of the F0 of the following stressed vowels. It is shown that despite considerable intersubject variation, IF0 differences between the classes of close, open and nasal vowels are significant in both prosodic contexts analysed, but that variations within these classes were not significant (except for the nasal vowels). The principal source of variation for the co-intrinsic effect (as has been observed in many languages) was the opposition voiced/voiceless for the preceding consonant. This effect was greater at the onset of the vowel (4 STs) than at the pitch point where it was comparable to the IF0 effect (1 ST). A relative independence of the IF0 and CF0 effects was noted which tend either to combine or to cancel each other out depending on the phonetic context. A preliminary attempt to incorporate these effects into a synthetic model of intonation, by factoring out observed F0 contours into segmental and suprasegmental components, suggests that unlike IF0 and CF0 effects of consonants, which intervene at a fairly late level of phonetic implementation, IF0 effects of vowels are quite probably programmed at a higher level.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261758
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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4. |
Perceptual Compensation for Segmentally Conditioned Fundamental Frequency Perturbation |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 31-42
Niels Reinholt Petersen,
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PDF (1976KB)
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摘要:
The paper deals with the role of two types of segmentally conditioned fundamental frequency (F0) perturbation in speech perception, i. e. the differences in F0 between high and low vowels and the effect of prevocalic obstruent voicing on F0. The literature relevant to this issue is reviewed, and the results of a supplementary experiment on F0 as a cue to vowel identity are reported. On this basis three major points are made: (1) Although the pitch of vowels is influenced psychoacoustically by their spectral shape, this effect is too small to be of any significant importance in speech perception. (2) The two types of F0 perturbation are not treated differently in the speech perception process, and (3) irrespective of type, the segmentally conditioned F0 variation can function as a cue both to segment identity and to the identity of prosodic categories, depending on the actual demands upon the speech perception system.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261759
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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5. |
F0in the Production and Perception of Breathy Stops: Evidence from Hindi |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 43-69
L. Schiefer,
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摘要:
This article deals with the acoustical and perceptual importance of F0 perturbations in word-initial breathy CV syllables of Hindi. The first part is devoted to the acoustical analysis of F0 onset, F0 trajectory, average F0 of the breathy and steady portion, and duration of the breathy portion. It is concluded from the results that (i) F0 perturbations are a function of the place of articulation of the stop and/or tongue height and/or tongue position of the vowel; (ii) F0 onset reflects the larynx height and/or the activity of extrinsic larynx muscles, and (iii) the F0 trajectory represents the coarticulatory processes within the syllable. The importance of F0 onset, F0 trajectory, average F0, and duration of the breathy portion for the perception of breathy stops is examined in the second part of this study. It is shown, for 8 CV conditions /É–ha É–he É–hi É–ho É–hu bhi dhi ghi/ that F0 onset, F0 trajectory, and the duration of the breathy portion play an important role in the perception of breathy CV syll
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261760
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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6. |
Prosodic Effects on Lenis/Fortis Perception: Preplosive F0and LPC Synthesis |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 70-75
Klaus J. Kohler,
Willem A. van Dommelen,
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PDF (1623KB)
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摘要:
Two experiments, each with three sub-tests, examine the influences on lenis/ fortis perception of both preplosive F0 (flat vs. rising) in monotone utterance intonation and of natural vs. synthetic speech quality. The German word ‘leiten’ [laetn], ‘to lead’, pronounced by a male and a female speaker [Experiments I and II, respectively), formed the basis for the test stimulus construction. The stop closure (= silence) was varied by the same 5 steps to yield a continuum from clear /t/ to clear /d/ in all tests. The data support the conclusion that a rising as opposed to a non-rising F0 at the end of a preplosive vowel in a monotone utterance intonation increases /t/ perception. They also show that LPC synthesis quality is a strong additional cue for /t/, being stronger where it characterizes the whole utterance rather than only a small part of it. These influences on lenis/fortis perception are found to be consistent for the male and the femal
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261761
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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7. |
F0Segmental Cues Depend on Intonation: The Case of the Rise after Voiced Stops |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 76-91
Kim Silverman,
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PDF (2573KB)
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摘要:
Two different models of the influence of the stop voicing on F0 are identified. The more widely accepted of the two, called the rise-fall dichotomy, claims that F0 falls after voiceless stops but rises after voiced stops, and that the direction of post-release F0 is contextually invariant. The alternative model, referred to as the no-rise view, arose from recent production studies. It claims that the onset frequency of post-release F0 is raised after all stops, though only relatively little if they are phonologically voiced. More importantly, it sees F0 contours as a combination of segmental perturbations added onto a smooth underlying intonation contour. Consequently the direction of post-release F0 depends not only on segmental phonetic features but also on the prosodic structure. In three perceptual experiments utilising computer-synthesised intervocalic bilabial stops, opposing predictions of the two models are tested by embedding falling, level, and rising perturbations in different intonational environments. In each experiment the predictions of the no-rise view are supported and those of the rise-fall dichotomy are falsified. The conclusion drawn is that investigations of segmental phonetics can give rise to misleading results unless the accompanying prosodic structure is also taken into account.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261762
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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8. |
Interaction of Vowel F0and Prosody |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 92-105
Shirley A. Steele,
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PDF (2096KB)
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摘要:
In the experiment reported here, the intrinsic fundamental frequency (IF0) difference between high and low vowels was investigated in controlled prosodic contexts. Findings do not support the hypothesis proposed elsewhere that IF0 differences increase as a function of the speaker’s F0. An explanation which includes the influence of both vocal fold tension and subglottal pressure accounts for the data better than current theories of IF0 differences. IF0 differences may be explained as a phonetic-level result of the implementation of pitch accent and prominenc
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261763
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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9. |
Speaking Rate and Segments: A Look at the Relation between Speech Production and Speech Perception for the Voicing Contrast |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 106-115
J.L. Miller,
K.P. Green,
A. Reeves,
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PDF (2834KB)
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摘要:
When listeners process segmentally relevant properties of the speech signal they do so in a rate-dependent manner. This is seen as a shift in the perceptual category boundary; as rate declines and overall syllable duration increases, the category boundary moves toward a longer value of the acoustic property in question. Focusing on the /b/-/p/ distinction specified by voice onset time (VOT), we investigated whether the acoustic modifications that occur with an alteration in speaking rate accord with this pattern of perceptual boundary shift. Two main findings emerged. First, as speaking rate became slower and overall syllable duration became longer, the VOT value of the consonant, especially that of the voiceless /p/, also became longer. Second, and most important, the VOT value that optimally separated the /b/ and /p/ VOT distributions also changed with rate, increasing with increasing syllable duration. However, the magnitude of the boundary shift obtained for these production data was greater than that typically found in perceptual experiments. This suggests the existence of constraints on the extent to which the perceptual system can accommodate for alterations due to rate of speech.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261764
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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10. |
The Perception of Quantity in Icelandic |
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Phonetica,
Volume 43,
Issue 1-3,
1986,
Page 116-139
Jörgen Pind,
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PDF (3918KB)
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摘要:
Numerous studies, both in speech production and perception, have found that the acoustic representation of speech segments is heavily context-dependent. In particular the durations of speech sounds do not have fixed values but vary depending on their immediate context, speech tempo etc. In spite of this variability, the perceiver usually perceives correctly what the speaker intended to say. Two theoretical accounts have been given of this fact. On the one hand it has been postulated that the listener perceives correctly by taking into account the context of the speech segment he hears (the theory of normalization). Another view is that speech sound variability is primarily a surface phenomenon, and that invariants can be found in the speech wave on a closer analysis (the theory of constancy). The present study investigates the merits of these theories in the context of Icelandic speech perception. The experimental results show that normalization plays only a minor role in the perception of quantity in Icelandic.
ISSN:0031-8388
DOI:10.1159/000261765
出版商:S. Karger AG
年代:1986
数据来源: Karger
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