We propose a new method for extracting dynamic information from midsagittal ultrasound images of tongue shape and location. The method is based on analysing parts of the tongue contour as they appear to travel up and down fan lines at key articulatory locations, representing velar and alveolar constrictions. The tongue displacement in these dimensions serves as the basis for calculating instantaneous velocity, whose maxima and minima help to define articulatory events. We validate the proposed method using data on /l/-darkening in Standard Southern British English. Our analysis extracts systematic information about the relative timing of gestures involved in the articulation of post-vocalic /l/, and it provides the basis for selecting r...
Objective: Previous experimental studies have demonstrated abnormal lingual articulatory patterns ch...
We analyse Ultrasound Tongue Imaging (UTI) data from five speakers, whose native languages (L1) are ...
Item deposited in University of Manchester, Research Explorer repository, available at: https://www....
We propose a new method for extracting dynamic information from midsagittal ultrasound images of t...
International audienceThis study describes a highly automated approach to quantifying articulatory m...
While ultrasound has established itself as a tool for variation research, traditional methods focus ...
Ultrasound imaging is of interest to many dialectologists, due to the relative transportability and ...
This paper explores the use of deformable registration (speckle tracking) as a method for obtaining ...
The purpose of this study was to test the feasibility of a protocol for measuring coarticulation usi...
This study is an attempt to describe syllables with different onset structure not only in terms of d...
We investigate the contribution that lingual gesture delay makes to lenition of postvocalic /r/. Thi...
In this study ultrasound was used to investigate tongue movements in syllables with different number...
The syllable-based allophonic variation in the relative timing and magnitude of two gestures which h...
We investigate the contribution that lingual gesture delay makes to lenition of postvocalic /r/...
Bilabial stops often show a lowering of the tongue in symmetrical VCV sequences. The causes of this ...
Objective: Previous experimental studies have demonstrated abnormal lingual articulatory patterns ch...
We analyse Ultrasound Tongue Imaging (UTI) data from five speakers, whose native languages (L1) are ...
Item deposited in University of Manchester, Research Explorer repository, available at: https://www....
We propose a new method for extracting dynamic information from midsagittal ultrasound images of t...
International audienceThis study describes a highly automated approach to quantifying articulatory m...
While ultrasound has established itself as a tool for variation research, traditional methods focus ...
Ultrasound imaging is of interest to many dialectologists, due to the relative transportability and ...
This paper explores the use of deformable registration (speckle tracking) as a method for obtaining ...
The purpose of this study was to test the feasibility of a protocol for measuring coarticulation usi...
This study is an attempt to describe syllables with different onset structure not only in terms of d...
We investigate the contribution that lingual gesture delay makes to lenition of postvocalic /r/. Thi...
In this study ultrasound was used to investigate tongue movements in syllables with different number...
The syllable-based allophonic variation in the relative timing and magnitude of two gestures which h...
We investigate the contribution that lingual gesture delay makes to lenition of postvocalic /r/...
Bilabial stops often show a lowering of the tongue in symmetrical VCV sequences. The causes of this ...
Objective: Previous experimental studies have demonstrated abnormal lingual articulatory patterns ch...
We analyse Ultrasound Tongue Imaging (UTI) data from five speakers, whose native languages (L1) are ...
Item deposited in University of Manchester, Research Explorer repository, available at: https://www....