Recent sociophonetic research has shown significant differences in the pronunciation of vowels among dialects. However, dialectal differences in stop consonant productions have not been as widely researched. This study examines the differences between speakers from south-central/southeastern Wisconsin and westernmost North Carolina, specifically in terms of the way the voiced stop /b/ is produced. Twenty female speakers were selected from recordings, ten from Wisconsin and ten from North Carolina. Each subject read two sets of thirty sentences that included five sets of target words. Acoustic measurements of the consonant /b/ and the target word itself were completed. From these measurements the following variables were calculated: closu...
ABSTRACT: The aim of the current study is to investigate the contextual conditions of devoicing of p...
Linguistic stress or emphasis can be conveyed by at least four different acoustic cues: change in fu...
Many linguistic factors contribute to variation in vowel dispersion, including lexical properties, s...
Recent sociophonetic research has shown significant differences in the pronunciation of vowels among...
Humanities: 3rd Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research Forum)In English word...
Almost all studies on the phonetics of oral stop voicing patterns focus on languages with a voicing ...
ABSTRACT: The aim of the current study is to investigate the contextual conditions of devoicing of p...
The ‘voicing effect’ – the durational difference in vowels preceding voiced and voiceless consonants...
Recent advances in access to spoken-language corpora and development of speech processing tools have...
This dissertation investigates how glottal stops are produced and perceived, and why they occur so f...
The ‘voicing effect’ – the durational difference in vowels preceding voiced and voiceless consonants...
There are many different regional dialects of American English most of which differ as a function of...
The data reported in this article contain eleven (6 female and 5 male) individual speaker’s speech p...
In this study, an acoustic analysis of the dental fricatives as produced by American English speaker...
We report the results of a comprehensive dialectal survey of three vowel duration phenomena in North...
ABSTRACT: The aim of the current study is to investigate the contextual conditions of devoicing of p...
Linguistic stress or emphasis can be conveyed by at least four different acoustic cues: change in fu...
Many linguistic factors contribute to variation in vowel dispersion, including lexical properties, s...
Recent sociophonetic research has shown significant differences in the pronunciation of vowels among...
Humanities: 3rd Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research Forum)In English word...
Almost all studies on the phonetics of oral stop voicing patterns focus on languages with a voicing ...
ABSTRACT: The aim of the current study is to investigate the contextual conditions of devoicing of p...
The ‘voicing effect’ – the durational difference in vowels preceding voiced and voiceless consonants...
Recent advances in access to spoken-language corpora and development of speech processing tools have...
This dissertation investigates how glottal stops are produced and perceived, and why they occur so f...
The ‘voicing effect’ – the durational difference in vowels preceding voiced and voiceless consonants...
There are many different regional dialects of American English most of which differ as a function of...
The data reported in this article contain eleven (6 female and 5 male) individual speaker’s speech p...
In this study, an acoustic analysis of the dental fricatives as produced by American English speaker...
We report the results of a comprehensive dialectal survey of three vowel duration phenomena in North...
ABSTRACT: The aim of the current study is to investigate the contextual conditions of devoicing of p...
Linguistic stress or emphasis can be conveyed by at least four different acoustic cues: change in fu...
Many linguistic factors contribute to variation in vowel dispersion, including lexical properties, s...