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The Perception of Coarticulated Emphaticness
Phonetica, 1974Abstract This study answers the question whether listeners could identify the presence of an emphatic class of consonants (m, ð, s, t, k), even when tape-splicing removed, from the word, the consonant in question. The speech materials consisted of 14 pairs of meaningful Arabic words contrasted in a single consonant; these consonants were
L H, Ali, R G, Daniloff
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Coarticulation Effects in Lipreading
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1982Normal-hearing and hearing-impaired subjects with good lipreading skills lipread videotaped material under visual-only conditions. V 1 CV 2 utterances were used where V could he /i/, /æ/ or/u/ and C could be /p/, /t/, /k/, /t∫/, /f/, /Θ/, /s/, /∫/ or/w/.Coarticulatory effects were present in ...
A P, Benguerel, M K, Pichora-Fuller
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Identification of coarticulated vowels
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1980Previous explanations of vowel perception held that the most definitive information for vowel identity is the relatively constant formant frequencies in the steady-state portions of vowels. Perceptual studies indicate, however, that vowels spoken in syllables with labial stop consonants are identified more accurately than vowels spoken in isolation ...
T L, Gottfried, W, Strange
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Coarticulation of Lip Rounding
Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1968We investigated the extent of coarticulation of lip rounding in selected speech strings. Meaningful sentences containing sequences of one to four consonants preceding the vowel /u/ were constructed, with word and syllable boundaries falling within the sequences in various ways.
R, Daniloff, K, Moll
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Perception of Coarticulated Nasality
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1971CVC and CVVC syllables were prepared in which the final consonants were either nasal consonants (/m/, /n/) or non-nasal consonants. The entire final consonant along with its vowel-consonant transition was spliced away. The resulting CV and CVV syllables along with carrier phrases were spliced at random onto a tape for presentation to listeners who were
L, Ali +3 more
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2018
The study of coarticulation—namely, the articulatory modification of a given speech sound arising from coproduction or overlap with neighboring sounds in the speech chain—has attracted the close attention of phonetic researchers for at least the last 60 years.
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The study of coarticulation—namely, the articulatory modification of a given speech sound arising from coproduction or overlap with neighboring sounds in the speech chain—has attracted the close attention of phonetic researchers for at least the last 60 years.
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Parsing coarticulated speech in perception: effects of coarticulation resistance
Journal of Phonetics, 2005Abstract A speaker produced schwa-CV disyllables in which consonants were low or high in coarticulation resistance. Articulatory and acoustic measurements verified that the magnitude, but not the extent, of anticipatory coarticulation from the stressed vowel to the schwa was modulated by coarticulation resistance.
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Numerical Model of Coarticulation
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1967The essential features of the coarticulation properties of Swedish dental stops in vowel-consonant-vowel contexts can be described by the formula s(x; t) = v(x; l)+k (t)[c(x) − v(x; t)]wc(x), where x represents the longitudinal distance between lips and glottis and s(x; t) denotes the shape of the vocal tract at some instant of time, t, during the ...
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1999
The variation that a speech sound undergoes under the influence of neighbouring sounds has acquired the well-established label coarticulation. The phenomenon of coarticulation has become a central problem in the theory of speech production. Much experimental work has been directed towards discovering its characteristics, its extent and its occurrence ...
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The variation that a speech sound undergoes under the influence of neighbouring sounds has acquired the well-established label coarticulation. The phenomenon of coarticulation has become a central problem in the theory of speech production. Much experimental work has been directed towards discovering its characteristics, its extent and its occurrence ...
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COARTICULATION AND THE LOCUS THEORY
Studia Linguistica, 1967The effects of coarticulation on formant transitions do not “… necessitate a re-evaluation of the locus theory…” [S. E. G. Ohman, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 39, 151 (1966)]. In fact, no acoustic data on human speech behavior could be used to alter this theory since it is essentially based, not on the production of human speech, but on the perception of ...
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