Most dialects of North American English exhibit /ae/-raising in some phonological contexts. Both the conditioning environments and the temporal dynamics of the raising vary from region to region. To explore the articulatory basis of /ae/-raising across North American English dialects, acoustic and articulatory data were collected from a regionally diverse group of 24 English speakers from the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. A method for examining the temporal dynamics of speech directly from ultrasound video using EigenTongues decomposition [Hueber, Aversano, Chollet, Denby, Dreyfus, Oussar, Roussel, and Stone (2007). in IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (Cascadilla, Honolulu, HI)] was a...
The experimental method described in this manuscript offers a possible means to address a well known...
English /ɹ/ is known to exhibit covert variability, with tongue postures ranging from bunched to ret...
Formant dynamics are believed to reflect the characteristic articulatory behavior of a speaker. The ...
Most dialects of North American English exhibit /æ/-raising in some phonological contexts. Both the ...
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 trans- portability an...
ABSTRACT: We consider allophonic and speaker-specific variation in the alveolar gestures found in vo...
In acoustic studies of vowel nasalization, it is sometimes assumed that the primary articulatory dif...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/- /æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Aus...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/-/æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Austr...
Using B/M mode ultrasound, Derrick & Gick (2010) identified four categorical variations of flaps in ...
allowing for comparison among vowels of the world’s languages. Direct measurements of the articulato...
The syllable-based allophonic variation in the relative timing and magnitude of two gestures which h...
This dissertation investigates articulatory characteristics of English /I/ in child speech. The stu...
Scottish English is often cited as a rhotic dialect of English. However, in the 70s and 80s, researc...
The experimental method described in this manuscript offers a possible means to address a well known...
English /ɹ/ is known to exhibit covert variability, with tongue postures ranging from bunched to ret...
Formant dynamics are believed to reflect the characteristic articulatory behavior of a speaker. The ...
Most dialects of North American English exhibit /æ/-raising in some phonological contexts. Both the ...
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 trans- portability an...
ABSTRACT: We consider allophonic and speaker-specific variation in the alveolar gestures found in vo...
In acoustic studies of vowel nasalization, it is sometimes assumed that the primary articulatory dif...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/- /æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Aus...
This paper investigates a merger-in-progress of /e/-/æ/ in prelateral contexts for speakers of Austr...
Using B/M mode ultrasound, Derrick & Gick (2010) identified four categorical variations of flaps in ...
allowing for comparison among vowels of the world’s languages. Direct measurements of the articulato...
The syllable-based allophonic variation in the relative timing and magnitude of two gestures which h...
This dissertation investigates articulatory characteristics of English /I/ in child speech. The stu...
Scottish English is often cited as a rhotic dialect of English. However, in the 70s and 80s, researc...
The experimental method described in this manuscript offers a possible means to address a well known...
English /ɹ/ is known to exhibit covert variability, with tongue postures ranging from bunched to ret...
Formant dynamics are believed to reflect the characteristic articulatory behavior of a speaker. The ...