Background/Aims: Previous research found that individual talkers have consistent differences in the production of segments impacting the perception of their speech by others. Speakers also produce multiple acoustic-phonetic cues to phonological contrasts. Less is known about how multiple cues covary within a phonetic category and across talkers. We examined differences in individual talkers across cues and whether token-by-token variability is a result of intrinsic factors or speaking style by examining within-category correlations. Methods: We examined correlations for 3 cues (voice onset time, VOT, talker-relative onset fundamental frequency, f0, and talker-relative following vowel duration) to word-initial labial stop voicing in English....
One of the inherent characteristics of speech is that the same discrete units like phonemes, syllab...
Interlocutors perceive phonemic category boundaries relative to talkers’ produced speech rates. For ...
<p>Speech categories are defined by multiple acoustic dimensions, and listeners give differential we...
Recent findings indicate that listeners are sensitive to talker differences in phonetic properties o...
Studies of speaker variability in the realisation of stop voicing contrasts have demonstrated that ...
A number of recent studies have observed that phonetic variability is constrained across speakers, w...
It is often reported that for non-native listeners of a language, some native speakers ' produc...
Sources of variation in the speech signal Recent studies suggest that speech perception is a talker-...
<p>One of the persistent puzzles in understanding human speech perception is how listeners cope with...
As explanation of between-speaker differences in speech production moves beyond sex-and age-related ...
There is no one-to-one mapping between speech acoustics and individual speech sounds. The acoustic c...
Speech sounds contrast on many acoustic dimensions. The constellation of acoustic "cues" defining a ...
The nature of the categories that are basic in linguistic representation is an important issue in sp...
Little is known about intraspeaker changes in voice across changing speaking situations in everyday ...
Two talkers ’ productions of the same phoneme may be quite different acoustically, whereas their pro...
One of the inherent characteristics of speech is that the same discrete units like phonemes, syllab...
Interlocutors perceive phonemic category boundaries relative to talkers’ produced speech rates. For ...
<p>Speech categories are defined by multiple acoustic dimensions, and listeners give differential we...
Recent findings indicate that listeners are sensitive to talker differences in phonetic properties o...
Studies of speaker variability in the realisation of stop voicing contrasts have demonstrated that ...
A number of recent studies have observed that phonetic variability is constrained across speakers, w...
It is often reported that for non-native listeners of a language, some native speakers ' produc...
Sources of variation in the speech signal Recent studies suggest that speech perception is a talker-...
<p>One of the persistent puzzles in understanding human speech perception is how listeners cope with...
As explanation of between-speaker differences in speech production moves beyond sex-and age-related ...
There is no one-to-one mapping between speech acoustics and individual speech sounds. The acoustic c...
Speech sounds contrast on many acoustic dimensions. The constellation of acoustic "cues" defining a ...
The nature of the categories that are basic in linguistic representation is an important issue in sp...
Little is known about intraspeaker changes in voice across changing speaking situations in everyday ...
Two talkers ’ productions of the same phoneme may be quite different acoustically, whereas their pro...
One of the inherent characteristics of speech is that the same discrete units like phonemes, syllab...
Interlocutors perceive phonemic category boundaries relative to talkers’ produced speech rates. For ...
<p>Speech categories are defined by multiple acoustic dimensions, and listeners give differential we...