IRIS publication 17503087
An electropalatographic investigation of middorsum palatal stops in an adult with repaired cleft palate.
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TY - JOUR - Gibbon, F. E.,Crampin, L. - 2001 - March - Cleft Palate Craniofacial Journal - An electropalatographic investigation of middorsum palatal stops in an adult with repaired cleft palate. - Validated - () - 38 - 2 - 96 - 105 - OBJECTIVE: Middorsum palatal stops are compensatory articulations that occur relatively frequently in cleft palate speech. This study used electropalatographic (EPG) and acoustic data to investigate /t/ and /k/ targets produced as middorsum palatal stops ([c]) by an adult with an articulation disorder associated with a repaired cleft palate. RESULTS: Two novel observations were made from the instrumental data. First, although /t/ and /k/ targets were judged by phonetically trained listeners as homophonous (i.e., both produced as [c]), the EPG data revealed that the place of articulation for the [c] produced for /t/ was more anterior than the place of articulation for the [c] produced for /k/. Second, production of palatal stops involved lateral release followed by a variable period of lateral friction. Measurements made from the instrumental data quantified the temporal extent of lateral friction during the aspiration period. CONCLUSIONS: These observations merit further systematic investigation in cleft palate speech, and the procedures reported in this study are considered appropriate for such future research. - 1055-6656 (Print)1055-66 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve;db=PubMed;dopt=Citation;list_uids=11294548 DA - 2001/03 ER -
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@article{V17503087, = {Gibbon, F. E. and Crampin, L. }, = {2001}, = {March}, = {Cleft Palate Craniofacial Journal}, = {An electropalatographic investigation of middorsum palatal stops in an adult with repaired cleft palate.}, = {Validated}, = {()}, = {38}, = {2}, pages = {96--105}, = {{OBJECTIVE: Middorsum palatal stops are compensatory articulations that occur relatively frequently in cleft palate speech. This study used electropalatographic (EPG) and acoustic data to investigate /t/ and /k/ targets produced as middorsum palatal stops ([c]) by an adult with an articulation disorder associated with a repaired cleft palate. RESULTS: Two novel observations were made from the instrumental data. First, although /t/ and /k/ targets were judged by phonetically trained listeners as homophonous (i.e., both produced as [c]), the EPG data revealed that the place of articulation for the [c] produced for /t/ was more anterior than the place of articulation for the [c] produced for /k/. Second, production of palatal stops involved lateral release followed by a variable period of lateral friction. Measurements made from the instrumental data quantified the temporal extent of lateral friction during the aspiration period. CONCLUSIONS: These observations merit further systematic investigation in cleft palate speech, and the procedures reported in this study are considered appropriate for such future research.}}, issn = {1055-6656 (Print)1055-66}, = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve;db=PubMed;dopt=Citation;list_uids=11294548}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Gibbon, F. E.,Crampin, L. | ||
YEAR | 2001 | ||
MONTH | March | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | Cleft Palate Craniofacial Journal | ||
TITLE | An electropalatographic investigation of middorsum palatal stops in an adult with repaired cleft palate. | ||
STATUS | Validated | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | |||
VOLUME | 38 | ||
ISSUE | 2 | ||
START_PAGE | 96 | ||
END_PAGE | 105 | ||
ABSTRACT | OBJECTIVE: Middorsum palatal stops are compensatory articulations that occur relatively frequently in cleft palate speech. This study used electropalatographic (EPG) and acoustic data to investigate /t/ and /k/ targets produced as middorsum palatal stops ([c]) by an adult with an articulation disorder associated with a repaired cleft palate. RESULTS: Two novel observations were made from the instrumental data. First, although /t/ and /k/ targets were judged by phonetically trained listeners as homophonous (i.e., both produced as [c]), the EPG data revealed that the place of articulation for the [c] produced for /t/ was more anterior than the place of articulation for the [c] produced for /k/. Second, production of palatal stops involved lateral release followed by a variable period of lateral friction. Measurements made from the instrumental data quantified the temporal extent of lateral friction during the aspiration period. CONCLUSIONS: These observations merit further systematic investigation in cleft palate speech, and the procedures reported in this study are considered appropriate for such future research. | ||
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ISBN_ISSN | 1055-6656 (Print)1055-66 | ||
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URL | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve;db=PubMed;dopt=Citation;list_uids=11294548 | ||
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