The American English phoneme /r / has long been associated with large amounts of articulatory variability during production. This paper investigates the hypothesis that the articulatory variations used by a speaker to produce /r / in different contexts exhibit systematic tradeoffs, or articulatory trading relations, that act to maintain a relatively stable acoustic signal despite the large variations in vocal tract shape. Acoustic and articulatory recordings were collected from seven speakers producing /r / in five phonetic contexts. For every speaker, the different articulator configurations used to produce /r / in the different phonetic contexts showed systematic tradeoffs, as evidenced by significant correlations between the positions of...
We report our investigation of the well-known context-dependent variation in English /r/ using a bio...
Scottish English is often cited as a rhotic dialect of English. However, in the 70s and 80s, researc...
We describe an asymmetric categorical pattern of onset-coda allophony for English /r/, the post-alve...
Acoustic and articulatory recordings reveal that speakers utilize systematic articulatory tradeoffs ...
The purpose of this report is to test the hypothesis that speakers utilize an acoustic, rather than ...
This paper investigates the functional relationship between articulatory variability and stability o...
The study of speech acoustics is vital for understanding the relationship between articulation and t...
This ultrasound and acoustics study of American English /r/ and /s/ investigates whether variability...
This paper argues that inter-individual and inter-group variation in language acquisition, perceptio...
We examine the distinction between consonantal-r and vocalic-r in American English, terms encoun...
Previous research [1, 2] shows that articulatory variability is reduced for people with flatter pala...
Variation in the production of English /l/ has received significant study. It has been characterized...
The variety of articulatory configurations used for American English rhotic liquids suggests that sp...
This study examines the acoustics of /r / as produced by native speakers of British English who have...
The most fundamental division in English dialects is the rhotic/non-rhotic division. The mechanisms ...
We report our investigation of the well-known context-dependent variation in English /r/ using a bio...
Scottish English is often cited as a rhotic dialect of English. However, in the 70s and 80s, researc...
We describe an asymmetric categorical pattern of onset-coda allophony for English /r/, the post-alve...
Acoustic and articulatory recordings reveal that speakers utilize systematic articulatory tradeoffs ...
The purpose of this report is to test the hypothesis that speakers utilize an acoustic, rather than ...
This paper investigates the functional relationship between articulatory variability and stability o...
The study of speech acoustics is vital for understanding the relationship between articulation and t...
This ultrasound and acoustics study of American English /r/ and /s/ investigates whether variability...
This paper argues that inter-individual and inter-group variation in language acquisition, perceptio...
We examine the distinction between consonantal-r and vocalic-r in American English, terms encoun...
Previous research [1, 2] shows that articulatory variability is reduced for people with flatter pala...
Variation in the production of English /l/ has received significant study. It has been characterized...
The variety of articulatory configurations used for American English rhotic liquids suggests that sp...
This study examines the acoustics of /r / as produced by native speakers of British English who have...
The most fundamental division in English dialects is the rhotic/non-rhotic division. The mechanisms ...
We report our investigation of the well-known context-dependent variation in English /r/ using a bio...
Scottish English is often cited as a rhotic dialect of English. However, in the 70s and 80s, researc...
We describe an asymmetric categorical pattern of onset-coda allophony for English /r/, the post-alve...