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Assimilation or coarticulation? Evidence from the coordination of tongue gestures for the palatalization of Bulgarian alveolar stops.

Wood, Sidney A J LU (1996) 24(1). p.139-164
Abstract
Three issues are considered in this report —are assimilation and coarticulation the same process or different, are they achieved by feature spreading or by coproduction, and what level or levels of neuromotor planning or production do they represent? Tongue gestures analysed from an X-ray motion film of Bulgarian speech are presented as examples of what the tongue is made to do in speech and of how those gestures are co-ordinated with other articulator gestures, in particular for the palatalization of apico-alveolar stops. The gestures involved in this assimilation are initiated earlier, or are held longer, than in nonassimilated situations. The revision of gesture timing in relation to adjacent activity indicates that assimilation is... (More)
Three issues are considered in this report —are assimilation and coarticulation the same process or different, are they achieved by feature spreading or by coproduction, and what level or levels of neuromotor planning or production do they represent? Tongue gestures analysed from an X-ray motion film of Bulgarian speech are presented as examples of what the tongue is made to do in speech and of how those gestures are co-ordinated with other articulator gestures, in particular for the palatalization of apico-alveolar stops. The gestures involved in this assimilation are initiated earlier, or are held longer, than in nonassimilated situations. The revision of gesture timing in relation to adjacent activity indicates that assimilation is preplanned and does not reflect coarticulation or the effect of vocal tract biodynamics. Secondly, the gestural programming for this case of palatalization is better described as coproduction than feature spreading. Finally the temporal organization of coarticulation reported here also agrees with that reported previously. In particular, potentially conflicting gestures are not blended but are produced sequentially, which favors the gesture queuing paradigm rather than the tug-of-war paradigm and indicates that coarticulation is also preplanned. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Journal of Phonetics
editor
Recasens, D
volume
24
issue
1
pages
139 - 164
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:0029715616
ISSN
0095-4470
DOI
10.1006/jpho.1996.0009
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e87a317f-3c41-4681-9501-6123d8e65b22 (old id 529421)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 17:10:49
date last changed
2023-11-15 01:04:38
@inproceedings{e87a317f-3c41-4681-9501-6123d8e65b22,
  abstract     = {{Three issues are considered in this report —are assimilation and coarticulation the same process or different, are they achieved by feature spreading or by coproduction, and what level or levels of neuromotor planning or production do they represent? Tongue gestures analysed from an X-ray motion film of Bulgarian speech are presented as examples of what the tongue is made to do in speech and of how those gestures are co-ordinated with other articulator gestures, in particular for the palatalization of apico-alveolar stops. The gestures involved in this assimilation are initiated earlier, or are held longer, than in nonassimilated situations. The revision of gesture timing in relation to adjacent activity indicates that assimilation is preplanned and does not reflect coarticulation or the effect of vocal tract biodynamics. Secondly, the gestural programming for this case of palatalization is better described as coproduction than feature spreading. Finally the temporal organization of coarticulation reported here also agrees with that reported previously. In particular, potentially conflicting gestures are not blended but are produced sequentially, which favors the gesture queuing paradigm rather than the tug-of-war paradigm and indicates that coarticulation is also preplanned.}},
  author       = {{Wood, Sidney A J}},
  booktitle    = {{Journal of Phonetics}},
  editor       = {{Recasens, D}},
  issn         = {{0095-4470}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{139--164}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  title        = {{Assimilation or coarticulation? Evidence from the coordination of tongue gestures for the palatalization of Bulgarian alveolar stops.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jpho.1996.0009}},
  doi          = {{10.1006/jpho.1996.0009}},
  volume       = {{24}},
  year         = {{1996}},
}