ASA 127th Meeting M.I.T. 1994 June 6-10

1pSP26. Gestural and prosodic influences on the articulation of consonant sequences.

Dani Byrd

Phon. Lab., UCLA Dept. of Linguist., 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90024-1543

This study investigates several factors affecting articulatory timing and reduction in English consonant sequences. Electropalatography was used to record five speakers saying sentences containing a consonant cluster spanning a word boundary. Based on the EPG contact profiles, metrics were calculated indicating the overlap of the consonants and their spatial displacement, i.e., magnitude. The following results were obtained. (1) Coronal consonants are more overlapped by a following velar stop than a velar stop is by a following coronal. (2) A stop is more overlapped by a following consonant than is a fricative. (3) Movements in coda position are smaller than movements in onset position for stops but not for fricatives. (4) Movements in coda position are more variable than movements in onset position for stops but not for fricatives. Findings (3) and (4) suggest that variability may play an important role in reduction processes. In summary, these findings support the claim that speech coordination is affected by linguistic factors. These factors include both gestural influences---such as place and manner of articulation---and prosodic influences---such as syllablic position. This experiment provides significant data with which models of speech timing can be further explicated to more accurately reflect articulatory coproduction. [Work supported by NSF.]