In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from formant values using the following heuristic: F1 is inversely correlated with tongue height and F2 is inversely correlated with tongue backness. This study compared vowel formants and corresponding lingual articulation in two dialects of English, standard North American English, and Australian English. Five speakers of North American English and four speakers of Australian English were recorded producing multiple repetitions of ten monophthongs embedded in the /sVd/ context. Simultaneous articulatory data were collected using electromagnetic articulography. Results show that there are significant correlations between tongue position and formants in...
Few electromagnetic articulography (EMA) datasets are publicly available, and none have focused syst...
This paper compares and quantifies the differences between formants of speech across accents. The cr...
We studied tongue positions of vowels in oral and nasal contexts. In the previous study [Arai, J. Ac...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
A common assumption about vowel formants is that F1 inversely correlates with tongue height and F2 i...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 74-82.1. Introduction -- 2. Australian English vowels -- 3. Art...
International audienceAbstract The nature of the links between speech production and perception has ...
This study quantifies vocalic variation that cannot be measured from the acoustic signal alone and d...
The purpose of this study was to quantitatively contrast the articulatory settings of two Dutch dial...
The following article appeared in Lawson, E., Stuart-Smith, J. & Rodger, L. (2019) A comparison of a...
This study explored correlations between (a) measures of vocal tract anatomy and (b) measures of ar...
This study examines dynamic acoustic-articulatory relations in back vowels, focusing on the effect o...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterPublication status: ppublishThis study quantifies vocalic va...
The present study uses electromagnetic articulography, by which the position of tongue and lips duri...
This study compares the duration and first two formants (F1 and F2) of 11 nominal monophthongs and f...
Few electromagnetic articulography (EMA) datasets are publicly available, and none have focused syst...
This paper compares and quantifies the differences between formants of speech across accents. The cr...
We studied tongue positions of vowels in oral and nasal contexts. In the previous study [Arai, J. Ac...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
A common assumption about vowel formants is that F1 inversely correlates with tongue height and F2 i...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 74-82.1. Introduction -- 2. Australian English vowels -- 3. Art...
International audienceAbstract The nature of the links between speech production and perception has ...
This study quantifies vocalic variation that cannot be measured from the acoustic signal alone and d...
The purpose of this study was to quantitatively contrast the articulatory settings of two Dutch dial...
The following article appeared in Lawson, E., Stuart-Smith, J. & Rodger, L. (2019) A comparison of a...
This study explored correlations between (a) measures of vocal tract anatomy and (b) measures of ar...
This study examines dynamic acoustic-articulatory relations in back vowels, focusing on the effect o...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterPublication status: ppublishThis study quantifies vocalic va...
The present study uses electromagnetic articulography, by which the position of tongue and lips duri...
This study compares the duration and first two formants (F1 and F2) of 11 nominal monophthongs and f...
Few electromagnetic articulography (EMA) datasets are publicly available, and none have focused syst...
This paper compares and quantifies the differences between formants of speech across accents. The cr...
We studied tongue positions of vowels in oral and nasal contexts. In the previous study [Arai, J. Ac...