| Number | 648 |
|---|---|
| Year | 1988 |
| Drawer | 11 |
| Entry Date | 11/17/1999 |
| Authors | Nittrouer, S., Munhall, K., Kelso, J.A.S., Tuller, B., & Harris, K. S. |
| Contact | |
| Publication | Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 84, 1653-1661. |
| url | http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Reprints/HL0648.pdf |
| Abstract | Work by Tuller and Kelso [J. Acoust. Soc. Am.. 76, 1030-1036 (1984)] and Kelso et al. [J. Phon. 14, 29-59 (1986)] has demonstrated stable relations between jaw and lip movements in /bV#CVb/ utterances across rate and stress conditions. Specifically, the onset of lip movement toward the intervalic consonant was found to be constant with respect to the vowel-to-vowel jaw cycle in both time and relative phasing. An attempt was made to replicated and extend this work by investigating interarticulator phase relations for utterances having a broader range of linguistic organization: In addition to rate and stress, syllable structure (open versus closed syllables) and identity of the intervalic consonant (/p/ vs /m/) were manipulated. Results showed that the upper lip’s lowering onset varied systematically with respect to the jaw vowel cycle as a function of both rate and stress. In addition, syllable structure and consonant identify influenced the relation of lip and jaw gestures. There was a general tendency for any condition that shortened the first vowel to produce earlier onsets of the upper lip relative to the jaw. However, the within-condition jaw cycle duration variability did not correlate with the within-condition variability in phase. Thus it seems that stable interarticulator phase relations maintain not only the integrity of phonological structure, as suggested by Kelso et al., but structural integrity at other levels of linguistic organization as well. |
| Notes |