The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception

Coarticulation makes vowels in context acoustically different from context-free vowels. Listeners sometimes compensate by ascribing these acoustic effects to their source, but the conditions under which they do so have not yet been fully pinpointed. Ohala (1993) had suggested that acoustic effects w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Georgia Zellou, Anne Pycha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2018-08-01
Series:Laboratory Phonology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/118
id doaj-c23eb58e627a4346bf3ab53b51ea7a7d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c23eb58e627a4346bf3ab53b51ea7a7d2021-10-02T06:47:42ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesLaboratory Phonology1868-63541868-63542018-08-019110.5334/labphon.11864The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perceptionGeorgia Zellou0Anne Pycha1University of California, Davis, Linguistics Department, 469 Kerr Hall, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Linguistics Department, Johnston Hall Room 117, Milwaukee, WI 53211Coarticulation makes vowels in context acoustically different from context-free vowels. Listeners sometimes compensate by ascribing these acoustic effects to their source, but the conditions under which they do so have not yet been fully pinpointed. Ohala (1993) had suggested that acoustic effects which are temporally more distant from their source should be more susceptible to misattribution. In three experiments, we tested this hypothesis by varying the temporal extent of coda-triggered coarticulation on vowels and investigating its influence on two different perceptual behaviors: speaker-model representation and vowel-phoneme identification. Experiment 1 asked listeners to estimate speaker height based on /giC/ and /gɪC/ nonsense tokens produced by twelve female speakers. Results indicated a gradient effect: Within lax /ɪ/, greater temporal extent of coarticulation correlated with taller height judgments. Experiment 2a was similar, except that temporal extent of coarticulation in the tokens varied across a wider range of values than in Experiment 1. Results again indicated a gradient effect: Within lax /ɪ/, greater temporal extent of coarticulation correlated with taller height judgments. In Experiment 2b, listeners performed an AXB vowel-phoneme discrimination task. Results showed that greater temporal extent of coarticulation correlated with greater likelihood of listeners judging an intended /ɪ/ token to contain the vowel /ʌ/. Taken together, our results indicate that temporal extent of coarticulation affects both speaker-models and interpretation of vowel identity.https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/118temporal dynamicscoarticulationperceptual compensationspeaker height perceptionvowel perceptionsound change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Georgia Zellou
Anne Pycha
spellingShingle Georgia Zellou
Anne Pycha
The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
Laboratory Phonology
temporal dynamics
coarticulation
perceptual compensation
speaker height perception
vowel perception
sound change
author_facet Georgia Zellou
Anne Pycha
author_sort Georgia Zellou
title The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
title_short The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
title_full The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
title_fullStr The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
title_full_unstemmed The gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
title_sort gradient influence of temporal extent of coarticulation on vowel and speaker perception
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Laboratory Phonology
issn 1868-6354
1868-6354
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Coarticulation makes vowels in context acoustically different from context-free vowels. Listeners sometimes compensate by ascribing these acoustic effects to their source, but the conditions under which they do so have not yet been fully pinpointed. Ohala (1993) had suggested that acoustic effects which are temporally more distant from their source should be more susceptible to misattribution. In three experiments, we tested this hypothesis by varying the temporal extent of coda-triggered coarticulation on vowels and investigating its influence on two different perceptual behaviors: speaker-model representation and vowel-phoneme identification. Experiment 1 asked listeners to estimate speaker height based on /giC/ and /gɪC/ nonsense tokens produced by twelve female speakers. Results indicated a gradient effect: Within lax /ɪ/, greater temporal extent of coarticulation correlated with taller height judgments. Experiment 2a was similar, except that temporal extent of coarticulation in the tokens varied across a wider range of values than in Experiment 1. Results again indicated a gradient effect: Within lax /ɪ/, greater temporal extent of coarticulation correlated with taller height judgments. In Experiment 2b, listeners performed an AXB vowel-phoneme discrimination task. Results showed that greater temporal extent of coarticulation correlated with greater likelihood of listeners judging an intended /ɪ/ token to contain the vowel /ʌ/. Taken together, our results indicate that temporal extent of coarticulation affects both speaker-models and interpretation of vowel identity.
topic temporal dynamics
coarticulation
perceptual compensation
speaker height perception
vowel perception
sound change
url https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/118
work_keys_str_mv AT georgiazellou thegradientinfluenceoftemporalextentofcoarticulationonvowelandspeakerperception
AT annepycha thegradientinfluenceoftemporalextentofcoarticulationonvowelandspeakerperception
AT georgiazellou gradientinfluenceoftemporalextentofcoarticulationonvowelandspeakerperception
AT annepycha gradientinfluenceoftemporalextentofcoarticulationonvowelandspeakerperception
_version_ 1716857699734388736