Title: On tone and syllable structure in Cantonese
1On tone and syllable structure in Cantonese
Alan C. L. Yu University of Chicago
2Goals
- To reexamine certain claims about the interaction
between tone and syllable structure in the
literature. - The focus will be on the realization contour
tones.
3Phonetic approach to contour tone licensing
condition
- The longer the sonorous portion of the rime, the
more complex a tone can be (Gordon 1999/2001,
Zhang 2000).
The tolerance of contour tones on syllables
which are inherently less well suited to carrying
tonal information implies the tolerance of
contour tones on syllables which are better
suited to manifesting tone (Gordon 2001447) CVV
gt CVR gt CVO gt CV
4Cantonese tonal inventory
Why do CV syllables carry rising tones but
CVO/CVVO syllables do not? (cf. CVO gt CV)
5Gordon demonstrates that the rhyme duration of
smooth syllables is significantly longer than
that of checked syllables in Cantonese.
6An Exception
- While contour tones are restricted to
phonetically long syllables in Cantonese, they
are suspended in certain derived forms - CV(V)O syllables may carry a rising tone (25)
when they undergo a process called Pinjam
??Changed Tone.
7Pinjam ?? in Cantonese
8An analysis
- Gordon (1999) argues that CVVO syllables may host
contour tones in the Pinjam contexts because the
constraint MAXmorpheme is ranked higher than
the constraint that licenses contour tones in
rimes contained solely of sonorants.
9? in ?? ? ? in ?? p??k?33 to strike p??k?25
a racket
10Problems
- No empirical confirmation is available.
- Languages vary in their responses to the
realization of contour tone in syllables with
insufficient tone-bearing ability.
11Zhang (2001)
- A contour tone encounters a syllable with
insufficient tone-bearing ability - Where does Cantonese fall in this typology?
12Contour tone-induced lengthening in Cantonese
13Subjects
- Six native speakers of Cantonese (three males and
three females) currently residing in the US.
14Methods
- Stimuli were monosyllabic Cantonese words of
three different syllable types (i.e.
plosive-final, vowel-final, and nasal-final),
which were chosen to form (near-)minimal pairs or
triplets (i.e. with identical rhyme).
15Methods
- For CVV and CV(V)N syllables, the minimal
triplets consisted of three tone types lexical
low-mid-rising (25), lexical level or falling
(22, 33, or 21) and Pinjam-derived low-mid-rising
(25).
16CVV stimuli
17CV(V)N stimuli
18Methods
- For the CVVO syllables, minimal pairs consisted
of two tone versions level (22 or 33) and
derived low-mid-rising (25) no lexical
low-mid-rising is available. - Both CVVO and CV(V)N tokens contain some short
vowels.
19CV(V)O stimuli
20Methods
- The targeted syllables were presented as part of
a disyllabic word phrase to ensure that the
appropriate pronunciations were rendered. - Certain pairs of targeted syllables are
represented by the same Chinese characters the
semantic and pronunciation differences are only
apparent when the character is used in the
appropriate context. - ? sou33 to sweep vs. ?? t?s?k?55 sou25 a
bamboo broom
21Methods
- The subjects recited a list of Cantonese target
disyllabic words/phrases in the carrier phrase
??? __ ??? /?? wui t?k? ___ p?i n?i t?æ?/ three
times. - (2 tones x 1 syllable type (CVVO) 3 tones x 2
syllables (CVV CV(V)N)) x 10 tokens x 3
repetitions 240 tokens
22Example stimuli
23Measurements
f?n25 powder
F0 Peak
Turning Point
24Measurements
- excursion size pitch difference (in semitone)
between adjacent f0 minimum and maximum in the
target syllable - excursion time time interval between adjacent
f0 minimum and maximum in the target syllable - excursion speed (excursion size/excursion time).
25Hypotheses
- Null hypothesis no difference (i.e. the rhyme
of a CV(V)O syllable remains the same regardless
the type of tone it bears. - Phonetic approach to contour tone licensing
- CV(V)O syllables with a derived rising tone are
longer than their level-toned counterparts. - No comparable lengthening should be observed in
CVV or CV(V)N syllables since they are already
phonetically long.
26Duration analysis
- How the presence of a contour tone affects
syllable duration
27Level vs. Derived Rising
- CV(V)O with derived R is significantly longer
than CV(V)O with a level tone. - No comparable length difference is found in the
other syllable types.
28Discussion
- These results show that CVVO syllables under
Pinjam are no exceptions to Gordons
generalization. - When a CVVO syllable acquires a contour tone, its
intrinsic shortness is remedied via the
lengthening of the rhyme in Cantonese. - Similar patterns are found in Mitla Zapotec
(Briggs 1961), Wuyi Chinese (Fu 1984), Gã (Paster
1999).
29Question
- While the presence of a contour tone affects the
duration of the rhyme, what effect does the
shortness of CVVO have on the realization of a
contour tone?
30Analysis of the f0 contour
- How syllable structure affects contour tone
realization
31The rising contours
32Patterns of contour alignment
- The f0 peak is reached at approximately 90 point
of the rhyme regardless of syllable structure.
33Patterns of contour alignment
- The turning point in CV(V)O comes significantly
earlier than that in CVV syllable. - The difference in turning point alignment between
obstruent- and nasal-final syllables did not
reach the adjusted level of significance (p
0.036).
34The shape of the contour
35Excursion size (the rise)
- The difference between the excursion sizes of the
vowel- and nasal-final syllables reaches
significance. - The differences in excursion size between CV(V)O
and CVV and between CV(V)O and CV(V)N did not
reach significance.
p lt 0.01
36Excursion time
- The excursion times for all three syllables are
significantly different from each other. - This suggests that a rising tone in a CV(V)O
syllable must cover as large (if not larger) a
pitch rise as CVV syllables but in a much shorter
amount of time.
37Excursion speed (the slope)
- The pitch excursion speed was significantly
faster in the CV(V)O syllable than in the
nasal-final syllable (p lt 0.001) and than in the
CVV syllable. - No difference in slope between CVV and CV(V)N is
found.
38Discussion
- The results suggest that rising tones are
realized significantly differently across
syllable structures. - Tonal target undershoots are observed in
obstruent-final and vowel-final syllables. - Yet, the nature of the undershoot differs
depending on syllable structure.
39Onset truncation in CV(V)O
- When the syllable is obstruent-final, tonal
target undershoot is in the form of
onset-truncation. - The beginning of the rise originates from an
earlier point relative to the onset of the rhyme
and a higher f0 in an obstruent-final syllable
than in a nasal-final syllable.
40End truncation in CVV
- When the syllable is vowel-final, tonal target
undershoot results in end-truncation instead. - While the rising tone in both vowel- and
nasal-final syllables originate from the same
point, the rise in a vowel-final syllable
culminates at a lower f0 than observed in a
nasal-final syllable.
41Discussion
- Gordons assertion concerning the exception
nature of rising tone in CV(V)O is not warranted. - Rhyme duration is lengthened and the rising
contour is reduced when an obstruent-final
syllable acquires a rising tone from Pinjam.
42Puzzle
- If contour reduction is possible, then why is
lengthening necessary? - Lexical rising tone syllable vs. its level tone
counterpart?
43Level vs. Lexical Rising
- CVV and CV(V)N syllables are longer when their
bear a lexical rising tone than when they carry a
level tone. - The difference in duration between level and
derived rising toned syllables and between
lexical and derived rising toned syllables do not
reach significance level.
44Puzzle
- Syllables with long rime duration do not
necessarily escape the lengthening effect, since
CVV and CV(V)N syllables are longer when they
bear a lexical rising tone than when they bear a
level tone. Why should this be?
45Some explanations
- Many researchers have characterized the observed
differences in syllable duration with respect to
the level, extent, and direction of fundamental
frequency as physiologically conditioned. - For example, studies on the maximum speed with
which pitch can be changed found that subjects
were able to perform pitch drops considerably
faster than pitch elevation even though the pitch
ranges are comparable (Ohala Ewan, 1973
Sundberg, 1973, 1979 Xu Sun, 2002).
46Perception of tone and duration
- Lehiste (1976), for example, found that
listeners judge a dynamic (falling-rising or
rising-falling), as supposed to a flat f0
pattern, to be longer even when the stimuli are
of equal acoustic durations. - This finding was replicated in other studies on
perceived duration of isolated vowels (Pisoni,
1976 Wang, Lehiste, Chuang, Darnovsky, 1976).
47Research question
- Does the perceptual effect found in earlier
studies on dynamic tone and duration extend to
tonal languages?
48Methodology
49Stimuli
- A 300 ms pa syllable was synthesized using
SynthWorks. - A 3-step duration continuum was created with 100
ms. decreasing increments 300, 200, and 100 ms. - The f0 of the syllable was manipulated to make
five stimuli of varying f0 contours.
50Subjects
- Seven native speakers of Cantonese (2 males 5
females), all students at the University of
Chicago, were paid a nominal fee to participate
in the experiment. - None of them report any speech or hearing
problems.
51Procedures
- Subjects were asked to rate each stimulus for
duration on a 7-point scale, with 1 being the
shortest duration and 7 being the longest. - Subjects first completed a practice session of
nine trials with the 33 tone stimuli at three
durations presented three times in a random
order. - After practice, subjects completed an
experimental session of 300 trials (5 tones x 3
durations x 20 blocks) with the order of trials
randomized within each block.
52Procedures
- The presentation of the stimuli was controlled by
the subject. - Presentation of the next item starts after a
response is recorded. - The experiment was administered using E-Prime.
53Results
To facilitate cross-subject comparison, the data
was first normalized by transforming the rating
value to a z-score scale.
54Discussion
- The experimental results suggest that the height
and slope of fundamental frequency can
significantly affect the listeners perceived
duration of speech sounds.
55Discussion
- The results w.r.t dynamic f0 are consistent with
previous findings. - Dynamic f0 generally lengthens subjective
syllable duration.
56Discussion
- There is an intrinsic perceptual skewing
introduced by dynamic f0 movement regardless
whether the language is tonal or not. - The contour-tone lengthening effect observed in
synchronic typological patterns and diachronic
changes may not be purely a matter of
physiological constraints on tonal implementation.
57Discussion
- The fact that lexical rising toned CVV and CV(V)N
syllables have longer rhymes than their level
toned counterparts may be because rising toned
syllables are perceived as longer than level
toned syllables. - This perceptual skewing might have been
lexicalized as part of the phonetic makeup of
rising toned syllables.
58Conclusion
- While duration and sonority are important factors
for contour tone realization, the reverse
relationship appears to be equally important. - Duration and sonority might be just as likely to
be influenced by tonal movement as contour tone
realization may be dependent on duration and
sonority.
59The End