Articulatory parameterization in Trique tone production: Distinguishing co-production from coarticulation

The production of a tone in a tonal language is typically influenced by adjacent tonal targets. Within the literature, all such influences on F0 are considered part of tonal coarticulation. Yet, conflating all these effects under “coarticulation” results in an assortment of different processes withi...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2013-05, Vol.133 (5_Supplement), p.3572-3572
Hauptverfasser: DiCanio, Christian, Nam, Hosung
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The production of a tone in a tonal language is typically influenced by adjacent tonal targets. Within the literature, all such influences on F0 are considered part of tonal coarticulation. Yet, conflating all these effects under “coarticulation” results in an assortment of different processes within a tone language which lack a common motivating principle. In this talk, we present original tone production data from Itunyoso Trique (Oto-Manguean). The data consists of five repetitions of 24 sentences spoken at two speech rates (fast/normal) by eight native speakers. The medial target word was one of four tones (/45/,/4/,/32/,/2/), while the adjacent words were one of six tones (/45/,/43/,/32/,/3/,/2/,/1/). F0 data was extracted and time-normalized. Two patterns were observed. First, adjacent tones influenced F0 at the onset and offset of target tones. Second, global changes in F0 contour occurred for certain tones. All such effects were stronger during fast speech rate. We argue that these effects, often grouped together as coarticulation, have distinct explanations within an Articulatory Phonology framework. Transitional effects at tonal onsets and offsets are modeled by temporally modulating gestural activation intervals, resulting in articulatory undershoot between tones, whereas global changes in F0 contour are modeled by modulating gestural target parameters.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.4806546