Consonant Clusters and Structural Complexity 2012
DOI: 10.1515/9781614510772.205
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Coupling of tone and constriction gestures in pitch accents

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Cited by 20 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Niemann et al (2011) and Mücke et al (2012) suggest that a high tone be represented as a laryngeal gesture phased with respect to the vowel constriction gesture (in-phase), which in turn is phased with other consonants in the syllable (in-phase or anti-phase). Such a coordination of articulatory gestures would be expected to yield acoustic correlates that are interdependent in duration, depending on the strength and directness of the phasing relation between them.…”
Section: Tone Alignmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Niemann et al (2011) and Mücke et al (2012) suggest that a high tone be represented as a laryngeal gesture phased with respect to the vowel constriction gesture (in-phase), which in turn is phased with other consonants in the syllable (in-phase or anti-phase). Such a coordination of articulatory gestures would be expected to yield acoustic correlates that are interdependent in duration, depending on the strength and directness of the phasing relation between them.…”
Section: Tone Alignmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They have as their goal tonal targets and are coordinated with constriction gestures [13]. This approach has also been used to investigate Catalan and German pitch accents [65], and boundary tones in Greek [14,66]. These developments allow us to consider the relationship among prosodic events, and between prosodic events and constriction events, in terms of gestures and gestural coordination (where gestural coordination refers to the timing of gestures to each other).…”
Section: Prosodic Gestures (A) the P-gesture Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The framework of Articulatory Phonology [16,17] has in recent years started to include prosodic information [18,19,20,21,22,23]. More specifically tones have been proposed to represent articulatory gestures, i.e.…”
Section: The Interplay Of Tonal and Articulatory Gesturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More specifically tones have been proposed to represent articulatory gestures, i.e. tone gestures, comparable to consonantal and vocalic gestures [19,21], and tonal alignment has been shown to be more stable relative to articulatory landmarks [21,24,25,26] than to acoustic ones [27,28,29,30,31]. Lexical tone gestures in Mandarin have even been proposed to compete with consonantal gestures in onset [19].…”
Section: The Interplay Of Tonal and Articulatory Gesturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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