Literature DB >> 16938989

Interarticulator cohesion within coronal consonant production.

Christine Mooshammer1, Philip Hoole, Anja Geumann.   

Abstract

If more than one articulator is involved in the execution of a phonetic task, then the individual articulators have to be temporally coordinated with each other in a lawful manner. The present study aims at analyzing tongue-jaw cohesion in the temporal domain for the German coronal consonants [s, f, t, d, n, l], i.e., consonants produced with the same set of articulators--the tongue blade and the jaw--but differing in manner of articulation. The stability of obtained interaction patterns is evaluated by varying the degree of vocal effort: comfortable and loud. Tongue and jaw movements of five speakers of German were recorded by means of electromagnetic midsagittal articulography (EMMA) during [aCa] sequences. The results indicate that (1) tongue-jaw coordination varies with manner of articulation, i.e., a later onset and offset of the jaw target for the stops compared to the fricatives, the nasal and the lateral; (2) the obtained patterns are stable across vocal effort conditions; (3) the sibilants are produced with smaller standard deviations for latencies and target positions; and (4) adjustments to the lower jaw positions during the surrounding vowels in loud speech occur during the closing and opening movement intervals and not the consonantal target phases.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16938989     DOI: 10.1121/1.2208430

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  3 in total

1.  Bridging planning and execution: Temporal planning of syllables.

Authors:  Christine Mooshammer; Louis Goldstein; Hosung Nam; Scott McClure; Elliot Saltzman; Mark Tiede
Journal:  J Phon       Date:  2012-05-01

2.  The coarticulation/invariance scale: mutual information as a measure of coarticulation resistance, motor synergy, and articulatory invariance.

Authors:  Khalil Iskarous; Christine Mooshammer; Phil Hoole; Daniel Recasens; Christine H Shadle; Elliot Saltzman; D H Whalen
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2013-08       Impact factor: 1.840

3.  Spectral dynamics of sibilant fricatives are contrastive and language specific.

Authors:  Patrick F Reidy
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 1.840

  3 in total

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