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Categorical and gradient properties of assimilation in alveolar to velar sequences: evidence from EPG and EMA data
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66 |
New technology and the investigation of the articulatory process ...
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67 |
Covert contrast as a stage in the acquisition of phonetics and phonology.
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68 |
Q2 - A procedure for profiling impaired speech motor control of the tongue using electropalatography.
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69 |
New technology and the investigation of the articulatory process.
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77 |
CLEFTNET SCOTLAND: applications of new technology to the investigation and treatment of speech disorders associated with cleft palate within a Scottish context.
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78 |
Widening access to electropalatography for children with persistent sound system disorders.
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79 |
An EPG study of lingual errors in adults with acquired aphasia: Implications for models of speech production.
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80 |
An instrumental study of alveolar to velar assimilation in fast and careful speech.
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Abstract:
The assimilation of a word-final alveolar to a following velar has been traditionally described as a discrete phonological process. That is, the place of articulation features for the alveolar have been completely swapped for those of the velar. More recently electropalatographic (EPG) studies have shown empirically that this process is sometimes gradual, providing evidence of intermediate `residual' alveolar articulations. These conflicting perspectives raise the question: at what level in the generation and execution of an utterance does assimilation occur? A number of speakers' productions of /n#k/ were recorded using EPG. The major finding is that while some subjects produce gradient assimilations, others clearly demonstrate categorical assimilations. The lack of residual movement in the latter group was confirmed in a pilot study using EPG in combination with EMA (electromagnetic articulography), a technique which complements EPG contact-only data. On the basis of this, a speaker-. ; casl ; 3 ; pub ; 2545 ; pub
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URL: https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/2545 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12289/2545
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