Effects of initial position versus prominence in English
- Authors
- Cho, Taehong; Keating, Patricia
- Issue Date
- Oct-2009
- Publisher
- Academic Press
- Citation
- Journal of Phonetics, v.37, no.4, pp 466 - 485
- Pages
- 20
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Phonetics
- Volume
- 37
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 466
- End Page
- 485
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/176090
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.wocn.2009.08.001
- ISSN
- 0095-4470
1095-8576
- Abstract
- This study investigates effects of three prosodic factors-prosodic boundary (Utterance-initial vs. Utterance-medial), lexical stress (primary vs. secondary) and phrasal accent (accented vs. unaccented)-on articulatory and acoustic realizations of word-initial CVs (/n epsilon/, /t epsilon/) in trisyllabic English words. The consonantal measures were linguopalatal Peak contact and Release contacts (by electropalatography), Seal duration, Nasal duration and Nasal energy for /n/, VOT, RMS burst energy and spectral Center of Gravity at the release for /t/; and the vocalic measures were linguopalatal Vowel contact, Vowel F1, Vowel duration and Vowel amplitude. Several specific points emerge. Firstly, domain-initial articulation is differentiated front stress- or accent-induced articulations along several measures. Secondly, the vowel is effectively louder domain-initially, suggesting that the boundary effect is not strictly local to the initial consonant. Thirdly, some accentual effects can be seen in secondary-stressed syllables, suggesting that accentual influences spread beyond the primary-stressed syllable. Finally, unlike domain-initial effects, prominence effects are not cumulative. Thus we conclude that, at least for the kind of word-initial syllables tested here, different aspects of prosodic structure (domain boundary vs. prominence) are differentially encoded.
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