• 제목/요약/키워드: articulatory variation

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Articulatory characteristics and variation of Korean laterals

  • Hwang, Young;Charles, Sherman;Lulich, Steven M.
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제11권1호
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    • pp.19-27
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    • 2019
  • Lateral approximants are well known as having complex articulatory characteristics, which vary cross-linguistically, across speakers, and across utterances. However, less attention has been paid to the articulation of Korean laterals, which do not contrast with a rhotic and may thus exhibit greater-than-normal variability. The focus of this study is to investigate the general articulatory characteristics of the Korean lateral [l] as well as the articulatory variation using novel 3D ultrasound imaging methods. The results of this study revealed significant between-speaker variation and some vowel-dependent variation with regard to the articulation of the Korean lateral [l], which has not been reported previously. Even though all participants in this study showed an anterior occlusion, the place of articulation and the size of the occlusion varied greatly across speakers. The data also revealed that left-right asymmetry is present in the articulation of the Korean lateral. The individual variation of the Korean lateral [l] suggests that it has a large articulatory-acoustic space for variation, since it has no contrasting sound that causes perceptual confusion.

Prosodic Strengthening in Speech Production and Perception: The Current Issues

  • Cho, Tae-Hong
    • 음성과학
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    • 제14권4호
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    • pp.7-24
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    • 2007
  • This paper discusses some current issues regarding how prosodic structure is manifested in fine-grained phonetic details, how prosodically-conditioned articulatory variation is explained in terms of speech dynamics, and how such phonetic manifestation of prosodic structure may be exploited in spoken word recognition. Prosodic structure is phonetically manifested in prosodically important landmark locations such as prosodic domain-final position, domain-initial position and stressed/accented syllables. It will be discussed how each of the prosodic landmarks engenders particular phonetic patterns, ow articulatory variation in such locations are dynamically accounted for, and how prosodically-driven fine-grained phonetic detail is exploited by listeners in speech comprehension.

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Acoustic, Intraoral Air Pressure and EMG Studies of Vowel Devoicing in Korean

  • Kim, Hyun-Gi;Niimi, Sei-Ji
    • 음성과학
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    • 제10권1호
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    • pp.3-13
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    • 2003
  • The devoicing vowel is a phonological process whose contrast in sonority is lost or reduces in a particular phonetic environment. Phonetically, the vocal fold vibration originates from the abduction/adduction of the glottis in relation to supraglottal articulatory movements. The purpose of this study is to investigate Korean vowel devoicing by means of experimental instruments. The interrelated laryngeal adjustments and aerodynamic effects for this voicing can clarify the redundant articulatory gestures relevant to the distinctive feature of sonority. Five test words were selected, being composed of the high vowel /i/, between the fricative and strong aspirated or lenis affricated consonants. The subjects uttered the test words successively at a normal or at a faster speed. The EMG, the sensing tube Gaeltec S7b and the High-Speech Analysis system and MSL II were used in these studies. Acoustically, three different types of speech waveforms and spectrograms were classified, based on the voicing variation. The intraoral air pressure curves showed differences, depending on the voicing variations. The activity patterns of the PCA and the CT for devoicing vowels appeared differently from those showing the partially devoicing vowels and the voicing vowels.

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미국 영어 모음 체계의 몇 가지 지역 방언적 차이 (The Vowel System of American English and Its Regional Variation)

  • 오은진
    • 음성과학
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    • 제13권4호
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    • pp.69-87
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    • 2006
  • This study aims to describe the vowel system of present-day American English and to discuss some of its phonetic variations due to regional differences. Fifteen speakers of American English from various regions of the United States produced the monophthongs of English. The vowel duration and the frequencies of the first and the second formant were measured. The results indicate that the distinction between the vowels [c] and [a] has been merged in most parts of the U.S. except in some speakers from eastern and southeastern parts of the U.S., resulting in the general loss of phonemic distinction between the vowels. The phonemic merger of the two vowels can be interpreted as the result of the relatively small functional load of the [c]-[a] contrast, and the smaller back vowel space in comparison to the front vowel space. The study also shows that the F2 frequencies of the high back vowel [u] were extremely high in most of the speakers from the eastern region of the U.S., resulting in the overall reduction of their acoustic space for high vowels. From the viewpoint of the Adaptive Dispersion Theory proposed by Liljencrants & Lindblom (1972) and Lindblom (1986), the high back vowel [u] appeared to have been fronted in order to satisfy the economy of articulatory gesture to some extent without blurring any contrast between [i] and [u] in the high vowel region.

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성대의 비선형 2-mass 디지털 모델 구현 (Implementation of nonlinear two-mass vocal folds digital model)

  • 이희승;정명진
    • 대한전기학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 대한전기학회 2004년도 학술대회 논문집 정보 및 제어부문
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    • pp.9-11
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    • 2004
  • The vocal folds play an important role to produce glottal pulse which is an essential factor of phonation. There have been some models which implement the vocal folds' dynamics, such as one-mass model, two-mass model, multi-mass model and ribbon model. Among them, this paper uses nonlinear two-mass model, which is simple structure and produces similarly real glottal pulses and vocal folds' vibration, to realize vocal folds digital model. The pattern of movements in vocal folds will be shown in this paper by using vocal folds digital model. It will be verified how initial position of vocal folds. variation of tension and change of lung pressure influences vibration and glottal pulses.

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Explaining Phonetic Variation of Consonants in Vocalic Context

  • Oh, Eu-Jin
    • 음성과학
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    • 제8권3호
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    • pp.31-41
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    • 2001
  • This paper aims to provide preliminary evidence that (at least part of) phonetic phenomena are not simply automatic or arbitrary, but are explained by the functional guidelines, ease of articulation and maintenance of contrasts. The first study shows that languages with more high vowels (e.g., French) allow larger consonantal deviation from its target than languages with less high vowels (e.g., English). This is interpreted as achieving the economy of articulation to a certain extent in order to avoid otherwise extreme articulatory movement to be made in CV syllables due to strict demand on maintaining vocalic contrasts. The second study shows that Russian plain bilabial consonant allows less amount of undershoot due to the neighboring vowels than does English bilabial consonant. This is probably due to the stricter demand on maintaining the consonantal contrasts, plain vs. palatalized, existing only in Russian.

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Effects of gender, age, and individual speakers on articulation rate in Seoul Korean spontaneous speech

  • Kim, Jungsun
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제10권4호
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    • pp.19-29
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    • 2018
  • The present study investigated whether there are differences in articulation rate by gender, age, and individual speakers in a spontaneous speech corpus produced by 40 Seoul Korean speakers. This study measured their articulation rates using a second-per-syllable metric and a syllable-per-second metric. The findings are as follows. First, in spontaneous Seoul Korean speech, there was a gender difference in articulation rates only in age group 10-19, among whom men tended to speak faster than women. Second, individual speakers showed variability in their rates of articulation. The tendency for some speakers to speak faster than others was variable. Finally, there were metric differences in articulation rate. That is, regarding the coefficients of variation, the values of the second-per-syllable metric were much higher than those for the syllable-per-second metric. The articulation rate for the syllable-per-second metric tended to be more distinct among individual speakers. The present results imply that data gathered in a corpus of Seoul Korean spontaneous speech may reflect speaker-specific differences in articulatory movements.

A comparison of normalized formant trajectories of English vowels produced by American men and women

  • Yang, Byunggon
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제11권1호
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2019
  • Formant trajectories reflect the continuous variation of speakers' articulatory movements over time. This study examined formant trajectories of English vowels produced by ninety-three American men and women; the values were normalized using the scale function in R and compared using generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs). Praat was used to read the sound data of Hillenbrand et al. (1995). A formant analysis script was prepared, and six formant values at the corresponding time points within each vowel segment were collected. The results indicate that women yielded proportionately higher formant values than men. The standard deviations of each group showed similar patterns at the first formant (F1) and the second formant (F2) axes and at the measurement points. R was used to scale the first two formant data sets of men and women separately. GAMMs of all the scaled formant data produced various patterns of deviation along the measurement points. Generally, more group difference exists in F1 than in F2. Also, women's trajectories appear more dynamic along the vertical and horizontal axes than those of men. The trajectories are related acoustically to F1 and F2 and anatomically to jaw opening and tongue position. We conclude that scaling and nonlinear testing are useful tools for pinpointing differences between speaker group's formant trajectories. This research could be useful as a foundation for future studies comparing curvilinear data sets.

구어 말뭉치를 통한 한국어 용언활용에서의 모음조화 변이 및 변화 추이 연구 (Transition of vowel harmony in Korean verbal conjugation: Patterns of variation in a spoken corpus)

  • 강희조
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제15권2호
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    • pp.21-29
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    • 2023
  • 이 논문은 현대 한국어 용언활용에서 모음조화 양상에서 보이는 변이(조화형과 비조화형의 공존)가 어떤 언어 내적/외적 변수들에 의해 통제되고 있는지 확인하여 그 변화의 발동과 전파 과정을 설명하려는 연구이다. 이를 위하여 국립국어원 발행 일상 대화 음성 말뭉치를 활용하여 42개 어간의 조화형 및 비조화형을 검색한 후 음운/형태적 특성 및 사회언어학적 특성에 따른 효과를 검증하였다. 그 결과 전반적으로 비조화형의 비율이 1% 미만으로 매우 낮게 나타났으며 대부분은 /ㅏ/-모음 어간이 단모음 종결 어미와 결합한 사례임을 확인하였다. 다만 기존 연구들에서 거의 보이지 않던 연결 어미나 선어말 어미의 경우에도 비조화형이 소수 나타났다. 말뭉치에서 발견된 /ㅗ/-모음 어간의 비조화형을 자료로 삼아 청취실험을 실시하여 비조화형의 발동이 음운 감쇄나 과소 실현에 의해 일어났을 가능성을 보였다. 다만 전파되는 과정에는 모음의 변별도나 형태적 분석과 같은 인지적 관점에서의 설명이 더 나음을 주장한다. 결과적으로 현대 한국어의 모음조화 변이 및 변화는는 조음적/인지적 요인이 복합적으로 작용되었다고 본다.

Word-boundary and rate effects on upper and lower lip movements in the articulation of the bilabial stop /p/ in Korean

  • Son, Minjung
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제10권1호
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    • pp.23-31
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    • 2018
  • In this study, we examined how the upper and lower lips articulate to produce labial /p/. Using electromagnetic midsagittal articulography, we collected flesh-point tracking movement data from eight native speakers of Seoul Korean (five females and three males). Individual articulatory movements in /p/ were examined in terms of minimum vertical upper lip position, maximum vertical lower lip position, and corresponding vertical upper lip position aligned with maximum vertical lower lip position. Using linear mixed-effect models, we tested two factors (word boundary [across-word vs. within-word] and speech rate [comfortable vs. fast]) and their interaction, considering subjects as random effects. The results are summarized as follows. First, maximum lower lip position varied with different word boundaries and speech rates, but no interaction was detected. In particular, maximum lower lip position was lower (e.g., less constricted or more reduced) in fast rate condition and across-word boundary condition. Second, minimum lower lip position, as well as lower lip position, measured at the time of maximum lower lip position only varied with different word boundaries, showing that they were consistently lower in across-word condition. We provide further empirical evidence of lower lip movement sensitive to both different word boundaries (e.g., linguistic factor) and speech rates (e.g., paralinguistic factor); this supports the traditional idea that the lower lip is an actively moving articulator. The sensitivity of upper lip movement is also observed with different word boundaries; this counters the traditional idea that the upper lip is the target area, which presupposes immobility. Taken together, the lip aperture gesture is a good indicator that takes into account upper and lower lip vertical movements, compared to the traditional approach that distinguishes a movable articulator from target place. Respective of different speech rates, the results of the present study patterned with cross-linguistic lenition-related allophonic variation, which is known to be more sensitive to fast rate.