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Evidence of segmental articulations : Acceleration determines vowel segment duration in Swedish Word Accents

Svensson Lundmark, Malin LU orcid (2022) The 1st International Conference on Tone and Intonation p.156-160
Abstract
This study addresses a one-to-one relation between articulation and acoustics at segment boundaries. The study focuses on Swedish word accents and how a rising or falling tone affect vowel segment duration. The paper explains how segment boundaries are a result of rapid movements of the articulators. In the acceleration profile, this is identified as peak acceleration, which can be measured. The timing of two acceleration peaks (the distance between them is referred to as a posture interval) determines the duration of the acoustic segment. The purpose of the study is to see whether the posture intervals of active articulators correlate with the acoustic vowel segment, even if duration is affected by tonal context. To this end, acoustic and... (More)
This study addresses a one-to-one relation between articulation and acoustics at segment boundaries. The study focuses on Swedish word accents and how a rising or falling tone affect vowel segment duration. The paper explains how segment boundaries are a result of rapid movements of the articulators. In the acceleration profile, this is identified as peak acceleration, which can be measured. The timing of two acceleration peaks (the distance between them is referred to as a posture interval) determines the duration of the acoustic segment. The purpose of the study is to see whether the posture intervals of active articulators correlate with the acoustic vowel segment, even if duration is affected by tonal context. To this end, acoustic and articulatory data on long and short open vowels, produced by 18 Swedish speakers, have been collected. The data includes vowel acoustic segment duration, and peak acceleration of lip and tongue tip movements. The results suggest that: a) acoustic vowel segments can be determined by timing of consonantal articulation; b) peak acceleration successfully capture the acoustic changes constituting the segment boundary, at least for nasal stops; c) laryngeal production affects all orofacial movements, as the tone affects the timing of the consonantal articulation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
pages
156 - 160
conference name
The 1st International Conference on Tone and Intonation
conference location
Sonderborg, Denmark
conference dates
2021-12-06 - 2021-12-09
DOI
10.21437/TAI.2021-32
project
Exploring jaw articulation: Acceleration, displacement and timing of segmental articulations
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
442167e1-f41f-4efa-b554-033b81b1f58a
date added to LUP
2022-05-23 09:20:42
date last changed
2023-06-08 02:50:50
@misc{442167e1-f41f-4efa-b554-033b81b1f58a,
  abstract     = {{This study addresses a one-to-one relation between articulation and acoustics at segment boundaries. The study focuses on Swedish word accents and how a rising or falling tone affect vowel segment duration. The paper explains how segment boundaries are a result of rapid movements of the articulators. In the acceleration profile, this is identified as peak acceleration, which can be measured. The timing of two acceleration peaks (the distance between them is referred to as a posture interval) determines the duration of the acoustic segment. The purpose of the study is to see whether the posture intervals of active articulators correlate with the acoustic vowel segment, even if duration is affected by tonal context. To this end, acoustic and articulatory data on long and short open vowels, produced by 18 Swedish speakers, have been collected. The data includes vowel acoustic segment duration, and peak acceleration of lip and tongue tip movements. The results suggest that: a) acoustic vowel segments can be determined by timing of consonantal articulation; b) peak acceleration successfully capture the acoustic changes constituting the segment boundary, at least for nasal stops; c) laryngeal production affects all orofacial movements, as the tone affects the timing of the consonantal articulation.}},
  author       = {{Svensson Lundmark, Malin}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{156--160}},
  title        = {{Evidence of segmental articulations : Acceleration determines vowel segment duration in Swedish Word Accents}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/TAI.2021-32}},
  doi          = {{10.21437/TAI.2021-32}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}