The duration of speech segments as a function of position in utterances (initial, medial, final) was studied. In the first experiment seven English speakers read nonsense utterances of the form “say a [bab], say a [bábab], say a [babáb],” etc. Spectrograms were used to determine the duration of speech segments in the readings. Final syllables were found to be longer than nonfinal syllables. Final-syllable vowel increments were approximately 100 msec. Final-syllable consonant increments were less than vowel increments; for instance, absolute final consonant increments were about 20 msec. Also word-initial consonants were found to be lengthened by 20–30 msec over medial consonants. Subsequent experimentation demonstrated with English nonsense...
The subjects of this article are Kozhevnikov and Chistovitch's finding regarding the constancy of re...
International audienceResearch into the effect of stress and boundaries on segmental duration in spe...
The present analysis examined the interactive effects of articulation rate and position in phrases a...
The duration of speech segments as a function of position in utterances (initial, medial, final) was...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
International audienceWords in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utter...
Speech segments are lengthened at the onsets and offsets of linguistic constituents. Final-syllable ...
Contains reports on three research projects.U. S. Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories under Co...
Speech errors, or "slips of the tongue", have been studied in attempts to understand the speech prod...
This study aims to investigate the effect of syllable position on the articulation of English obstru...
Prosody facilitates perceptual segmentation of the speech stream into a sequence of words and phrase...
Published online: 13 March 2017It is widely accepted that duration can be exploited as phonological ...
The study focuses on durational variation of segments in read speech of Czech and British speakers o...
Contains fulltext : 194916.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In natural conv...
The subjects of this article are Kozhevnikov and Chistovitch's finding regarding the constancy of re...
International audienceResearch into the effect of stress and boundaries on segmental duration in spe...
The present analysis examined the interactive effects of articulation rate and position in phrases a...
The duration of speech segments as a function of position in utterances (initial, medial, final) was...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as ...
International audienceWords in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utter...
Speech segments are lengthened at the onsets and offsets of linguistic constituents. Final-syllable ...
Contains reports on three research projects.U. S. Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories under Co...
Speech errors, or "slips of the tongue", have been studied in attempts to understand the speech prod...
This study aims to investigate the effect of syllable position on the articulation of English obstru...
Prosody facilitates perceptual segmentation of the speech stream into a sequence of words and phrase...
Published online: 13 March 2017It is widely accepted that duration can be exploited as phonological ...
The study focuses on durational variation of segments in read speech of Czech and British speakers o...
Contains fulltext : 194916.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In natural conv...
The subjects of this article are Kozhevnikov and Chistovitch's finding regarding the constancy of re...
International audienceResearch into the effect of stress and boundaries on segmental duration in spe...
The present analysis examined the interactive effects of articulation rate and position in phrases a...