Results 211 to 220 of about 75,405 (258)
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Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 1994
The development of new measurement techniques and improved models of the larynx and the vocal tract have significantly advanced our understanding of speech motor control. Recently, several groups have been using electromagnetic transduction techniques to record tongue movements.
A, Löfqvist, B, Lindblom
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The development of new measurement techniques and improved models of the larynx and the vocal tract have significantly advanced our understanding of speech motor control. Recently, several groups have been using electromagnetic transduction techniques to record tongue movements.
A, Löfqvist, B, Lindblom
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Speech motor control in normal and disordered speech
2004Item does not contain ...
Maassen, B.A.M. +4 more
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2006
Writing about general phonetic theory Laver (1994, p. 95) believes that success will show in ‘the ability to describe and explain … the phonetic basis [our italics] for the differentiation of words and other linguistic units in every known human language’.
Mark Tatham, Katherine Morton
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Writing about general phonetic theory Laver (1994, p. 95) believes that success will show in ‘the ability to describe and explain … the phonetic basis [our italics] for the differentiation of words and other linguistic units in every known human language’.
Mark Tatham, Katherine Morton
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The motor control of speech rate
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1978This paper will discuss recently obtained physiological and acoustic data related to some theoretical issues surrounding the motor organization of speech rate. The specific question that will be addressed is whether vowel target undershoot, increased articulatory velocity, and greater coarticulation between adjacent segments, features associated with ...
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1989
Speech is produced by means of the coordinated activity of three subsystems: (1) The respiratory system consists of the lungs, and surrounding muscular and nonmuscular tissue of the thorax and abdomen, which can actively or passively change lung volume. During speech, air expelled from the lungs under relatively constant pressure by means of controlled
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Speech is produced by means of the coordinated activity of three subsystems: (1) The respiratory system consists of the lungs, and surrounding muscular and nonmuscular tissue of the thorax and abdomen, which can actively or passively change lung volume. During speech, air expelled from the lungs under relatively constant pressure by means of controlled
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Speech Motor Control and Predicting Disordered Speech
Perspectives on Speech Science and Orofacial Disorders, 1999Abstract There are numerous theories of speech production that focus on motor control for regulation of speech output. One of the more prominent is the “pressure regulation-control” model that was developed from studies of the aerodynamic speech activities of normal speakers and individuals with cleft lip and palate and accompanying resonance
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Orofacial Biomechanics and Speech Motor Control
Perspectives on Speech Science and Orofacial Disorders, 2009Abstract The mechanical properties (e.g., mass, stiffness, viscoelasticity) of bone, cartilage, muscle, tendon, ligament, fat, and skin among articulatory subsystems involved in speech and gesture collectively influence all aspects of movement and must be accounted for in the selection and sequencing of motor program elements.
Shin Ying Chu, Steven M. Barlow
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Motor Control Perspectives On Motor Speech Disorders
2004Abstract The heart of the perceptual method was a multidimensional perceptual description that assumed the independence of the 38 component dimensions used in their analysis. This was a good start, and one that remains influential, but we know today that perceptual dimensions such as the ones used by Darley and associates are not ...
Ray D Kent, Kristin Rosen
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Speech Motor ControlNew developments in basic and applied research
2010Speaking is not only the basic mode of communication, but also the most complex motor skill humans can perform. Disorders of speech and language are the most common sequelae of brain disease or injury, a condition faced by millions of people each year.
Maassen, Ben, Van Lieshout, Pascal
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Predictors of subsyllabic durations in speech motor control
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1989Speech motor control timing was examined by means of a multiple correlational analysis involving interarticulatory delay and speech rate as predictor variables, and four subsyllabic time segments of the syllable [ka] as dependent variables. The hypothesis was that the two putative temporal constraints have differential predictive capacity for various ...
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