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Stops

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... constriction of vocal tract. Fricatives are sometime referred to a continuants. Place and voicing Place and voicing Affricates Combination of a stop and fricative ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stops


1
Stops
  • Stops include / p, b, t, d, k, g/ (and glottal
    stop)
  • Stops may be described in terms of
  • Manner of articulation
  • Place of articulation
  • Voicing

2
Manner
  • All stops have same manner of articulation
  • Sudden burst of air or sudden stop in the burst
    of air.
  • All have an aperiodic sound source
  • All produced from mouth (as opposed to nares)
  • Rapid changes in articulators result in rapid
    change in acoustic resonance.

3
Place
  • Place of articulation refers to where the major
    constriction occurs.
  • Bilabial /p, b/
  • Alveolar (lingua-alveolar) /t, d/
  • Palatal (lingua-palatal) /k, g/
  • Note may be velar depending upon vowel context.
  • Glottal

4
Place
5
Spectrograms of Stops
6
Voicing
  • /p, b, k/ are unvoiced
  • Contain only an aperiodic component
  • /b, d, g/ are voiced
  • Contain both periodic and aperiodic component

7
Fricatives
  • Fricatives include
  • Similar to stops
  • Both contain an aperiodic noise source
  • Both have a place of maximum constriction
  • Both may be voiced or unvoiced
  • Different than stops
  • Manner of articulation fricatives involve only
    a partial constriction of vocal tract.
    Fricatives are sometime referred to a continuants.

8
Place and voicing
9
Place and voicing
10
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11
Affricates
  • Combination of a stop and fricative .

12
Sound Influence
  • Adaptation
  • Assimilation
  • Coarticulation

13
Adaptation
  • Variations in articulators as they move from one
    articulator to another resulting in different
    allophones.
  • E.g., key vs. coo . /ki/ vs. /ku/ or pea vs.
    pooh . /pi/ vs. /pu/
  • In both instances the production of the stop has
    been altered due to vowel context.

14
Assimilation
  • Extreme form of adaptation where production of
    phoneme is changed due to context.
  • E.g., the word think

15
Coarticulation
  • Two articulators moving at the same time for
    different phonemes.
  • E.g., /tu/. Lips are protruded in anticipation
    of /u/
  • During running speech coarticulation (along with
    adaptation and assimilation) occur constantly.

16
Suprasegmentals
  • Sometimes referred to as prosody.
  • Provide examples
  • Give speech its color, expression and sbutle
    meaning
  • Suprasegmentals include
  • Stress
  • Intonation
  • Duration and juncture

17
Stress
  • Increase in
  • Effort
  • Intensity
  • Pitch
  • Duration
  • Formant pattern

18
Stress (continued)
  • Acoustic events
  • Increase in fo
  • Formants not affected by adaptation
  • Higher muscle activity (e.g., emg)
  • Vowels have longer duration and are of greater
    intensity due to increase in subglottal air
    pressure.

19
Intonation
  • Change in fundamental frequency.

20
Intonation (continued)
  • Changing intonation can change meaning may
    signal attitude and feelings.
  • Rising inflection can signal difference between
    statement and question.
  • Flat intonation sometimes implies seriousness
  • Can denote sarcasm
  • May indicate excitement, etc.

21
Intonation (continued)
22
Duration and Junction
  • Duration
  • Usually involves changing length of vowel.
  • May be volitional or involuntary
  • Vowel before a voiced phoneme is longer than what
    occurs before an unvoiced consonant. E.g., wet
    vs. wed
  • Juncture
  • Combination of changes in stress and duration can
    cause change in meaning.
  • E.g., a name vs. an aim, Contest can mean either
    games, or a challenge depending upon context.

23
Summary
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