Title: Alignment of tonal targets: 30 years on
1Alignment of tonal targets 30 years on
- Bob Ladd
- University of Edinburgh
2(No Transcript)
3- Bruce, Gösta (1977). Swedish Word Accents in
Sentence Perspective. (Lund). - Ladd, D. Robert (1978, published 1980). The
Structure of Intonational Meaning Evidence from
English. (Cornell).
- Pierrehumbert, Janet (1980). The Phonology and
Phonetics of English Intonation. (MIT).
4Gösta or Bob?
(mid-1980s)
5Acknowledgements
- My collaborators Amalia Arvaniti, Michaela
Atterer, Ineke Mennen, Caterina Petrone, Astrid
Schepman, Rebekah Stackhouse, and Laurence White,
who are partly responsible for some of the
results I summarise here. - The UK Economic and Social Research Council and
the British Academy, which funded some of the
research reported here. - Carlo Ladd, for expert assistance with the
PowerPoint presentation.
6 Symposium On the 3rd of January 2007, Professor
Gösta Bruce will celebrate his 60th birthday. To
mark the occasion, the Department of Linguistics
and Phonetics will host a one-day symposium on
the theme "Word Accents and Tones in Sentence
Perspective". Gösta Bruce is one of the most
internationally well-known researchers in the
field of prosody. His doctoral dissertation
Swedish Word Accents in Sentence Perspective
(Lund University, 1977) was theoretically and
methodologically
as regards our way of analysing and understanding
prosodic phenomena. The current
symposium aims at bringing together researchers
in the area of prosody to focus on and discuss
the state of our knowledge as it relates to
phonetic and phonological patterning of word
accents and tones when they are concatenated in
utterances.
groundbreaking
His insight that
intonational contours in Swedish could be broken
down into different tonal components word
accents, sentence accent (associated with focus)
and terminal juncture (boundary tones) which
realize different combinations of two
phonological level tones H and L was a seminal
contribution to our understanding of intonational
patterning that was subsequently applied to many
other languages.
7Göstas key contributions?
- linear analysis of pitch contours into
pragmatically and grammatically distinct types of
elements - phonological description of pitch level expressed
in terms of local maxima and minima
8Autosegmental-Metrical Theory
- Pitch accent (Bolinger)
- Metrical structure (Liberman)
- Phrase accent two-level pitch phonology (Bruce)
9sentence accent rise
terminal juncture fall
word accent fall
ACCENT I
sentence accent rise
ACCENT II
terminal juncture fall
word accent fall
10- reaching a certain pitch level at a particular
point in time is the important thing, not the
movement (rise or fall) itself (Bruce 1977
132).
11More key contributions!
- Pitch events defined independently of syllables
- ALIGNMENT of pitch events and segmental string is
a useful parameter of phonetic description.
12- Malmberg draws the conclusion that there is a
relevant opposition between a pronounced fall in
the first syllable of Accent 1 and a slight rise
(or, sometimes, level pitch) in the first
syllable of Accent 2. (Hadding-Koch 1961, p. 64) - some stresses with Accent 2 coded as
exhibiting rises may end in rather marked falls
(ibid. p. 66) - Among the 329 monosyllables in the corpus 165
were falling ... , 115 rising , 15 level, and
34 crescent-shaped It would seem reasonable
to question whether monosyllables and disyllabic
words with Accent 1 should, as is usually done,
be classed together as having acute tonal
accent ... (ibid. p. 66)
13- the movement of pitch is everywhere
continuous, with an up-and-down alternation It
appears that if one did not know (by auditory
means) where the stresses are located, it would
not be possible to detect the characteristic word
tones. If we compare the tonal movement of two
specific words from their corpus, we find that
the first two syllables of each have almost
identical appearance Yet we know that the
first has accent 1 on the second syllable, while
the second has accent 2 on the first Wherever
we have an accent 1, its stress falls near the
low point of the curve in accent 2, the stress
comes earlier, and usually includes the preceding
high point, while the low point follows the main
stress. The melody is not in itself
distinctive, but acquires distinctive value when
it is associated with stress in a particular
way. (Haugen Joos 1953 (1972) 425f).
14(No Transcript)
15C
V
C
V
C
V
C
V
16 17C
V
C
V
C
Arvaniti, Ladd Mennen, 1998
18Atterer Ladd 2004, Fig. 2
19 Hes a m i n e r
Her fathers a m i n e r
20- Nino?
- Il Nino?
- È il Nino?
- È con il Nino?
- E là cè il Nino?
- E là cè con il Nino?
- E là stavano con il Nino?
Petrone Ladd, in preparation
21Petrone Ladd (in preparation)
22- Association
- is phonological and abstract
- is categorical and discrete
- Alignment
- is phonetic and concrete
- is continuously variable, and measurable
23- If you distinguish association from alignment,
you can easily - deal with cases where a prosodic cue belongs
phonologically with one syllable but is
manifested phonetically on another - think about the relation between phonological
categories and phonetic cues in ways familiar
from segmental phonology - make precise cross-language phonetic comparisons
analogous to segmental comparisons
24 English
Italian
/b/
/p/
/p/
/b/
prevoicing
aspiration
VOT
25- Eng. /bip/ It.
/pip/ - (This notation tells us only that we are
dealing with the early-VOT stop in English and
the late-VOT stop in Italian.) - Accent 1 HL Accent 2 HL
- (This notation tells us only that we are
dealing with early alignment in Accent 1 and late
alignment in Accent 2.)
26- Happy
- Birthday
- Gösta
- !!!!