Although formulated by Weinreich, Labov, and Herzog in 1968, the actuation problem has remained an unsolved problem in understanding sound change: if sound change is conceived as the accumulation of coarticulation, and coarticulation is widespread, how can some speech communities resist phonetic pressure to change? We present data from American English s-retraction that suggest a partial solution. S-retraction is the phenomenon in which is realized as an like sound, especially when it occurs in an cluster ('street' pronounced more like than like). The speech of English speakers judged not to exhibit s-retraction shows a large coarticulatory bias in the direction of retraction. Further, there is also substantial interspeaker variation in the...
Coarticulatory “noise” has long been presumed to benefit the speaker at the expense of the listener....
Acoustic and articulatory recordings reveal that speakers utilize systematic articulatory tradeoffs ...
This study investigates the claim that flapping patterns in American English are subject to phonetic...
The study explored whether an asymmetric phonetic overlap between speech sounds could be turned into...
This study investigates the role of individual differences in the earliest stages of...
English /ɹ/ is known to exhibit covert variability, with tongue postures ranging from bunched to ret...
Retraction of /s/ to a more [ʃ]-like sound is a well-known sound change attested across many varieti...
Retraction of /s/ to a more [ʃ]-like sound is a well-known sound change attested across many varieti...
The retraction of /s/ in /str/, eg street, is a sound change found in certain English dialects. Pr...
In this dissertation I investigated, by using coarticulatory /u/-fronting in the alveolar context fo...
Computational models are presented that evaluate different theories of sound change, particularly w...
This paper argues that inter-individual and inter-group variation in language acquisition, perceptio...
Many phoneticians and phonologists hypothesize that many sound patterns and sound changes that recur...
The current project examines the status of (str) retraction, an ongoing, phonetically-motivated soun...
This paper examines a relatively understudied sociolinguistic variable in English, the retraction of...
Coarticulatory “noise” has long been presumed to benefit the speaker at the expense of the listener....
Acoustic and articulatory recordings reveal that speakers utilize systematic articulatory tradeoffs ...
This study investigates the claim that flapping patterns in American English are subject to phonetic...
The study explored whether an asymmetric phonetic overlap between speech sounds could be turned into...
This study investigates the role of individual differences in the earliest stages of...
English /ɹ/ is known to exhibit covert variability, with tongue postures ranging from bunched to ret...
Retraction of /s/ to a more [ʃ]-like sound is a well-known sound change attested across many varieti...
Retraction of /s/ to a more [ʃ]-like sound is a well-known sound change attested across many varieti...
The retraction of /s/ in /str/, eg street, is a sound change found in certain English dialects. Pr...
In this dissertation I investigated, by using coarticulatory /u/-fronting in the alveolar context fo...
Computational models are presented that evaluate different theories of sound change, particularly w...
This paper argues that inter-individual and inter-group variation in language acquisition, perceptio...
Many phoneticians and phonologists hypothesize that many sound patterns and sound changes that recur...
The current project examines the status of (str) retraction, an ongoing, phonetically-motivated soun...
This paper examines a relatively understudied sociolinguistic variable in English, the retraction of...
Coarticulatory “noise” has long been presumed to benefit the speaker at the expense of the listener....
Acoustic and articulatory recordings reveal that speakers utilize systematic articulatory tradeoffs ...
This study investigates the claim that flapping patterns in American English are subject to phonetic...