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1
Spontaneous nasalization: An articulatory investigation of glottal consonants in Thai
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2
A sensorimotor basis of speech communication
Bryan, Jacob. - 2019
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3
The phonetic correlates of pharyngealization and pharyngealization spread patterns in Cairene Arabic an acoustic and real-time magnetic resonance imaging study
Hermes, Zainab. - 2018
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4
Contrast preservation and constraints on individual phonetic variation
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5
Investigating sources of phonological rarity and instability: a study of the palatal lateral approximant in Brazilian Portuguese
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6
Modeling of oropharyngeal articulatory adaptation to compensate for the acoustic effects of nasalization
Rong, Panying; Kuehn, David P.; Shosted, Ryan K.. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2017
Abstract: Hypernasality is one of the most detrimental speech disturbances that lead to declines of speech intelligibility. Velopharyngeal inadequacy, which is associated with anatomic defects such as cleft palate or neuromuscular disorders that affect velopharygneal function, is the primary cause of hypernasality. A simulation study by Rong and Kuehn [J. Speech Lang. Hear. Res. 55(5), 1438–1448 (2012)] demonstrated that properly adjusted oropharyngeal articulation can reduce nasality for vowels synthesized with an articulatory model [Mermelstein, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 53(4), 1070–1082 (1973)]. In this study, a speaker-adaptive articulatory model was developed to simulate speaker-customized oropharyngeal articulatory adaptation to compensate for the acoustic effects of nasalization on /a/, /i/, and /u/. The results demonstrated that (1) the oropharyngeal articulatory adaptation effectively counteracted the effects of nasalization on the second lowest formant frequency (F2) and partially compensated for the effects of nasalization on vowel space (e.g., shifting and constriction of vowel space) and (2) the articulatory adaptation strategies generated by the speaker-adaptive model might be more efficacious for counteracting the acoustic effects of nasalization compared to the adaptation strategies generated by the standard articulatory model in Rong and Kuehn. The findings of this study indicated the potential of using oropharyngeal articulatory adaptation as a means to correct maladaptive articulatory behaviors and to reduce nasality
URL: https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4963065
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/25610
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7
Effects of auditory feedback and real-time visual feedback on second language tone learning
Ning, Li-Hsin. - 2014
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8
When nasal is more than nasal: the oral articulation of nasal vowels in two dialects of French
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9
Intonation in Indian English and Hindi late and simultaneous bilinguals
Puri, Vandana. - 2013
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10
Modeling temporal coordination in speech production using an artificial central pattern generator neural network
Rusaw, Erin. - 2013
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11
The effects of lexical stress, intonational pitch accent, and speech rate on vowel quality in Catalan and Spanish
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12
The submorphemic structure of Amharic: toward a phonosemantic analysis
Ayalew, Bezza. - 2013
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13
Palatal complexity revisited: an electropalatographic analysis of /ŋ/ in Brazilian Portuguese with comparison to Peninsular Spanish
In: Language and speech. - London [u.a.] : Sage Publ. 55 (2012) 4, 477-502
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14
Using articulatory adjustment to compensate for hypernasality - a modeling study based on measures of electromagnetic articulography (EMA)
Rong, Panying. - 2012
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15
Affricating ejective fricatives: the case of Tigrinya
In: International Phonetic Association. Journal of the International Phonetic Association. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 41 (2011) 1, 41-65
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OLC Linguistik
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16
An articulatory-aerodynamic approach to stop excrescence
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 39 (2011) 4, 660-667
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OLC Linguistik
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17
Compensatory articulation in American English nasalized vowels
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 39 (2011) 4, 668-682
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OLC Linguistik
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18
Computational differences between whispered and non-whispered speech
Lim, Boon Pang. - 2011
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19
Coordinating voicing onset with articulation: a potential role for sensory cues in shaping phonological distinctions
In: Phonetica. - Berlin : De Gruyter Mouton 67 (2010) 1-2, 47-62
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OLC Linguistik
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20
Prosody production and perception with conversational speech
Mo, Yoonsook. - 2010
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