SAR SH 221 Lecture 5: Lecture 5

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There is a closure at some time in the vocal tract. We stop the ow of air, which means that there is: Turbulent air ow seen as brief noise burst . Frication: air is rushing through a little it of space. In voiceless onset plosives, aspiration (frication at the glottis) occurs between the burst and the onset of voicing. We have our mouths open, and we continue to exhale so that there is no frication, but our vocal folds are not vibrating. Stop release entails a change in vocal tract shape from the stop occlusion to vowel con guration. Formant transitions illustrate dynamic recon guration of vocal tract resonances. Formant transitions occur in reverse for postvocalic stop consonants. The articulation of speech sounds is affected by their segmental neighbors: coarticulation. Note tongue position during closure of /iki/ vs /aka/ with elecropalatography: retainer on the top of the mouth that measures where the tongue hits.

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