This study investigated effects of three prosodic factors—prosodic boundary, lexical stress, and accent—on articulatory and acoustic realizations of two CV syllables, /nE/ and /tE/. These syllables occurred at the beginning of trisyllabic English nonwords; their position in the larger phrase (prosodic boundary conditions), and whether they were lexically stressed and/or accented (prominence conditions) were varied. Articulatory measurements included linguopalatal contact (by electropalatography) for both C and V, stop consonant seal duration, and C‐to‐V contact difference; acoustic measurements include nasal duration and energy for /n/; VOT, burst energy and spectral center of gravity for /t/; and F1, vowel duration and vowel amplitude for /E/. We tested whether domain‐initial strengthening occurs in the C and/or the V segments independently of stress or accent conditions. We found that the effects of position and of stress/accent can be distinguished in the production and the acoustics of these syllables. One domain‐initial effect (greater consonant contact domain‐initially) was complementary to one stress/accent effect (greater vowel opening with stress/accent); in other cases the effects overlapped (greater vowel energy and tendency to longer consonant both domain‐initially and with stress/accent); in one case they conflicted (less consonant energy domain‐initially, more consonant energy with stress/accent).
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September 2005
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September 01 2005
Influence of prosodic factors on segment articulations and acoustics in English Free
Patricia Keating;
Patricia Keating
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095‐1543
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Taehong Cho
Taehong Cho
Hanyang Univ., Seoul, Korea
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Patricia Keating
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095‐1543
Taehong Cho
Hanyang Univ., Seoul, Korea
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 118, 2026 (2005)
Citation
Patricia Keating, Taehong Cho; Influence of prosodic factors on segment articulations and acoustics in English. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 September 2005; 118 (3_Supplement): 2026. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4785773
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