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Comparison of auto-contouring and hand-contouring of ultrasound images of the tongue surface ...
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Comparison of auto-contouring and hand-contouring of ultrasound images of the tongue surface ...
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Ultrasound-based tongue complexity in speech (Kabakoff et al., 2021) ...
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Ultrasound-based tongue complexity in speech (Kabakoff et al., 2021) ...
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Tongue Shapes for Rhotics in School-Age Children with and without Residual Speech Errors
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Voice Onset Time and beyond: Exploring laryngeal contrast in 19 languages
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Variability of articulator positions and formants across nine English vowels
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Voice Onset Time (VOT) at 50: Theoretical and practical issues in measuring voicing distinctions
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Direct Perceptions of Carol Fowler’s Theoretical Perspective
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Indexing head movement during speech production using optical markers
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Variability in English vowels is comparable in articulation and acoustics
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Perceptual Integration of Visual Evidence of the Airstream from Aspirated Stops
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Hearing tongue loops: Perceptual sensitivity to acoustic signatures of articulatory dynamics
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The coarticulation/invariance scale: Mutual information as a measure of coarticulation resistance, motor synergy, and articulatory invariance
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Computational simulation of CV combination preferences in babbling
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Biomechanically Preferred Consonant-Vowel Combinations Fail to Appear in Adult Spoken Corpora
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A gestural account of the velar fricative in Navajo
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Abstract:
Using the framework of Articulatory Phonology, we offer a phonological account of the allophonic variation undergone by the velar fricative phoneme in Navajo, a Southern or Apachean Athabaskan language spoken in Arizona and New Mexico. The Navajo velar fricative strongly coarticulates with the following vowel, varying in both place and manner of articulation. The variation in this velar fricative seems greater than the variation of velars in many well-studied languages. The coronal central fricatives in the inventory, in contrast, are quite phonetically stable. The back fricative of Navajo thus highlights 1) the linguistic use of an extreme form of coarticulation and 2) the mechanism by which languages can control coarticulation. It is argued that the task dynamic model underlying Articulatory Phonology, with the mechanism of gestural blending controlling coarticulation, can account for the multiplicity of linguistically-controlled ways in which velars coarticulate with surrounding vowels without requiring any changes of input specification due to context. The ability of phonological and morphological constraints to restrict the amount of coarticulation argues against strict separation of phonetics and phonology.
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Keyword:
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3994885 https://doi.org/10.1515/lp-2012-0011
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An Articulatory Phonology Account of Preferred Consonant-Vowel Combinations
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