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Full-Text Articles in Communication Sciences and Disorders
The Distinctness Of Speakers' Productions Of Vowel Contrasts Is Related To Their Discrimination Of The Contrasts, Joseph Perkell, Frank Guenther, Harlan Lane, Melanie Matthies, Ellen Stockmann, Mark Tiede, Majid Zandipour
The Distinctness Of Speakers' Productions Of Vowel Contrasts Is Related To Their Discrimination Of The Contrasts, Joseph Perkell, Frank Guenther, Harlan Lane, Melanie Matthies, Ellen Stockmann, Mark Tiede, Majid Zandipour
Harlan Lane
This study addresses the hypothesis that the more accurately a speaker discriminates a vowel contrast, the more distinctly the speaker produces that contrast. Measures of speech production and perception were collected from 19 young adult speakers of American English. In the production experiment, speakers repeated the words cod, cud, who'd, and hood in a carrier phrase at normal, clear, and fast rates. Articulatory movements and the associated acoustic signal were recorded, yielding measures of contrast distance between /ɑ/ and /ʌ/ and between /u/ and /ʊ/. In the discrimination experiment, sets of seven natural-sounding stimuli ranging from cod to cud and …
Speech Deterioration In Postlingually Deafened Adults, Harlan Lane, Jane Webster
Speech Deterioration In Postlingually Deafened Adults, Harlan Lane, Jane Webster
Harlan Lane
Postlingually deafened adults reading the Rainbow Passage differed from hearing-control subjects in producing greater pitch variability and mean pitch on stressed and unstressed vowels, greater fluctuations in pitch within sentences, less correlation of intrinsic pitch with vowel height and slower temporal parameters. When reading the Phonetic Inventory Sentences, they revealed less differentiation of place of articulation in fricative and plosive consonants. The present findings, taken together with those of longitudinal and implant studies, are applied to constraining models of the role of self hearing in the elaboration of speech.
Changes In Voice-Onset Time In Speakers With Cochlear Implants, Harlan Lane, Jane Wozniak, Joseph Perkell
Changes In Voice-Onset Time In Speakers With Cochlear Implants, Harlan Lane, Jane Wozniak, Joseph Perkell
Harlan Lane
Voice-onset time (VOT) and syllable duration were measured for the English plosives in /Cɑd/ (C=consonant) context spoken by four postlingually deafened recipients of multichannel (Ineraid) cochlear implants. Recordings were made of their speech before, and at intervals following, activation of the speech processors of their implants. Three patients reduced mean syllable duration following activation. Using measures of VOT and syllable duration from speakers with normal hearing [Volaitis and Miller, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 92, 723–735 (1992)] and from the subjects of this study, VOT is shown to vary approximately linearly with syllable duration over the ranges produced here. Therefore, the …