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Perceptual assessment of fricative–stop coarticulation
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1980The perceptual dependence of stop consonants on preceding fricatives [Mann and Repp, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 69, 548–558 (1981)] was further investigated in two experiments employing both natural and synthetic speech. These experiments consistently replicated our original finding that listeners, report velar stops following [s].
B H, Repp, V A, Mann
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2015
One of the central issues in contemporary phonetics is that of coarticulation. Speech segments do not and cannot occur isolated in real speech. As elements of a multisegmental utterance in continuous speech, all segments have neighbors which exert a certain degree of influence upon them.
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One of the central issues in contemporary phonetics is that of coarticulation. Speech segments do not and cannot occur isolated in real speech. As elements of a multisegmental utterance in continuous speech, all segments have neighbors which exert a certain degree of influence upon them.
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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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1980
This study investigates the relationship of articulatory variation to the visual perception of phonemes. Normal hearing and hearing-impaired subjects who had demonstrated good lipreading skills on a pilot test were selected to lipread videotaped tests under visual only conditions. Eighty-one V₁CV₂ utterances where V could be /I,æ,u/ and C could be /p,t,
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This study investigates the relationship of articulatory variation to the visual perception of phonemes. Normal hearing and hearing-impaired subjects who had demonstrated good lipreading skills on a pilot test were selected to lipread videotaped tests under visual only conditions. Eighty-one V₁CV₂ utterances where V could be /I,æ,u/ and C could be /p,t,
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