1992
DOI: 10.1121/1.402781
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On the sufficiency of compound target specification of isolated vowels and vowels in /bVb/ syllables

Abstract: It has been suggested [e.g., Strange et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 74, 695-705 (1983); Verbrugge and Rakerd, Language Speech 29, 39-57 (1986)] that the temporal margins of vowels in consonantal contexts, consisting mainly of the rapid CV and VC transitions of CVC's, contain dynamic cues to vowel identity that are not available in isolated vowels and that may be perceptually superior in some circumstances to cues which are inherent to the vowels proper. However, this study shows that vowel-inherent formant target… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…As summarized by recent contributions to this debate (e.g., Andruski & Nearey, 1992;Nearey, 1989;Rosner & Pickering, 1994;Strange, 1989a), current theories contrast the extraction of underlying target values via compensation for contextual effects (e.g., Kuwabara, 1985;Miller, 1989) with perception of dynamic specification of vowel identity, for example, in transitional information (Strange, 1989b;Verbrugge & Rakerd, 1986) or in vowel-inherent spectral change (Nearey & Assmann, 1986). We do not claim that an on-line task with natural vowel tokens addresses the same issues as arise in these debates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As summarized by recent contributions to this debate (e.g., Andruski & Nearey, 1992;Nearey, 1989;Rosner & Pickering, 1994;Strange, 1989a), current theories contrast the extraction of underlying target values via compensation for contextual effects (e.g., Kuwabara, 1985;Miller, 1989) with perception of dynamic specification of vowel identity, for example, in transitional information (Strange, 1989b;Verbrugge & Rakerd, 1986) or in vowel-inherent spectral change (Nearey & Assmann, 1986). We do not claim that an on-line task with natural vowel tokens addresses the same issues as arise in these debates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…In the case of vowels, listeners may be asked to classify a sound as a member of a particular category (e.g., Andruski & Nearey, 1992;Strange, 1989b); or it may be determined whether they can discriminate between two sounds belonging to the same or different categories (e.g., Gottfried, Jenkins, & Strange, 1985;Schouten & van Hessen, 1992); or detection thresholds for different sound categories may be measured as a function ofcontext (e.g., Rakerd, Verbrugge, & Shankweiler, 1984) or at varying intensity levels (e.g., Kewley-Port, 1991). These tasks have the valuable property offorcing a response from the subject, even ifit is only a best guess.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dynamic variations at the vowel target do exist in naturally produced nominal monophthongs and have been found in selective acoustic studies of American, Canadian, and Australian English vowels ͑e.g., Andruski and Nearey, 1992;Hillenbrand et al, 1995;Watson and Harrington, 1999͒. Yet, there is no acoustic evidence that vowel-inherent spectral change may actually vary systematically across geographic regions of the country and that the use of time-varying features may be a subject to regional variation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is well established that normal-hearing native listeners can identify vowels in CVC syllables on the basis of either the dynamic formant transitions that occur at the edges of the vowels, or the quasi steady-state formants that occur at the centers of the vowels, at least when the entire transitions or centers are provided Jenkins et al, 1983;Andruski and Neary, 1992). However, less is known about how well these listeners can identify vowels when only a portion of the formant transition or vowel center is available.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%