IRIS publication 380554
Normal patterns of tongue palate contact during bilabials
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TY - CONF - Yuen, I., Lee, A., ; Gibbon, F. E. - The 4th International EPG Symposium - Normal patterns of tongue palate contact during bilabials - Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom - Oral Presentation - 2005 - () - 0 - 29-SEP-05 - 30-SEP-05 - Many EPG studies have focused on alveolar and velar plosives and fricatives; however, few studies attempted to investigate bilabial articulation. It is not clear what the lingual pattern occurs when lingual contact is least expected during the bilabial production. Seven English-speaking subjects took part in an experiment to produce /p/, /b/ and /m/ in 6 intervocalic contexts --- i-i, i-u, i-a, u-u, u-i, u-a. The preliminary results indicated that EPG contact decreased in both i-i and u-u vowel contexts. When the three test segments – /p/, /b/ and /m/ occurred in the remaining four asymmetrical vowel contexts, fewer EPG contact was observed in the i-a context than that in the i-u context. A similar pattern of the decrease in EPG contact was also found in the u-a context as compared to that in the i-u context. These results suggested that the adjacent vowels affected the observed degree of EPG contact during the bilabial production. These findings will be discussed in terms of anticipatory assimilation. DA - 2005/NaN ER -
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@unpublished{V380554, = {Yuen, I., Lee, A., and Gibbon, F. E.}, = {The 4th International EPG Symposium}, = {{Normal patterns of tongue palate contact during bilabials}}, = {Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom}, = {Oral Presentation}, = {2005}, = {()}, = {0}, month = {Sep}, = {30-SEP-05}, = {{Many EPG studies have focused on alveolar and velar plosives and fricatives; however, few studies attempted to investigate bilabial articulation. It is not clear what the lingual pattern occurs when lingual contact is least expected during the bilabial production. Seven English-speaking subjects took part in an experiment to produce /p/, /b/ and /m/ in 6 intervocalic contexts --- i-i, i-u, i-a, u-u, u-i, u-a. The preliminary results indicated that EPG contact decreased in both i-i and u-u vowel contexts. When the three test segments – /p/, /b/ and /m/ occurred in the remaining four asymmetrical vowel contexts, fewer EPG contact was observed in the i-a context than that in the i-u context. A similar pattern of the decrease in EPG contact was also found in the u-a context as compared to that in the i-u context. These results suggested that the adjacent vowels affected the observed degree of EPG contact during the bilabial production. These findings will be discussed in terms of anticipatory assimilation.}}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Yuen, I., Lee, A., ; Gibbon, F. E. | ||
TITLE | The 4th International EPG Symposium | ||
PUBLICATION_NAME | Normal patterns of tongue palate contact during bilabials | ||
LOCATION | Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom | ||
CONFERENCE_TYPE | Oral Presentation | ||
YEAR | 2005 | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
PEER_REVIEW | 0 | ||
START_DATE | 29-SEP-05 | ||
END_DATE | 30-SEP-05 | ||
ABSTRACT | Many EPG studies have focused on alveolar and velar plosives and fricatives; however, few studies attempted to investigate bilabial articulation. It is not clear what the lingual pattern occurs when lingual contact is least expected during the bilabial production. Seven English-speaking subjects took part in an experiment to produce /p/, /b/ and /m/ in 6 intervocalic contexts --- i-i, i-u, i-a, u-u, u-i, u-a. The preliminary results indicated that EPG contact decreased in both i-i and u-u vowel contexts. When the three test segments – /p/, /b/ and /m/ occurred in the remaining four asymmetrical vowel contexts, fewer EPG contact was observed in the i-a context than that in the i-u context. A similar pattern of the decrease in EPG contact was also found in the u-a context as compared to that in the i-u context. These results suggested that the adjacent vowels affected the observed degree of EPG contact during the bilabial production. These findings will be discussed in terms of anticipatory assimilation. | ||
FUNDED_BY | * |