2020
DOI: 10.1353/lan.2020.0003
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Structured heterogeneity in Scottish stops over the twentieth century

Abstract: How and why speakers differ in the phonetic implementation of phonological contrasts, and the relationship of this 'structured heterogeneity' to language change, has been a key focus over fifty years of variationist sociolinguistics. In phonetics, interest has recently grown in uncovering 'structured variability'-how speakers can differ greatly in phonetic realization in nonrandom ways-as part of the long-standing goal of understanding variability in speech. The English stop voicing contrast, which combines ex… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Table 1 presents the findings from previous research on VOT in /t/ across Glaswegian English, Indian English, and Hindi. In the word-initial position, Glaswegian English /t/ is aspirated, which is reflected in longer lag/positive VOT (Sonderegger et al 2020;Stuart-Smith et al 2015), as seen in Table 1. By contrast, in both Hindi and Indian English (Table 1), /t/ remains unaspirated and has short-lag positive VOT (Benguerel and Bhatia 1980;Hauser 2016;Lisker and Abramson 1964;Ohala and Ohala 1992).…”
Section: Word-initial /T/mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 1 presents the findings from previous research on VOT in /t/ across Glaswegian English, Indian English, and Hindi. In the word-initial position, Glaswegian English /t/ is aspirated, which is reflected in longer lag/positive VOT (Sonderegger et al 2020;Stuart-Smith et al 2015), as seen in Table 1. By contrast, in both Hindi and Indian English (Table 1), /t/ remains unaspirated and has short-lag positive VOT (Benguerel and Bhatia 1980;Hauser 2016;Lisker and Abramson 1964;Ohala and Ohala 1992).…”
Section: Word-initial /T/mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Morrison, 2007;Schertz et al, 2015), and production data may describe how acoustic cues map to one of k (allo)phones (e.g. Cole et al, 2010;Davidson, 2016;McCarthy and Stuart-Smith, 2013;Sonderegger et al, 2020). These papers analyze their data using frequentist multinomial models, either using specialized packages for such models or by transforming the data to lme4compatible format.…”
Section: Examples: Discrete Ymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(2015) and Sonderegger et al. (2020) studied voice onset time change in the Glasgow variety of Scottish English using 7350 tokens from 23 speakers, and Stuart‐Smith et al. (2018) used approximately 112,000 force‐aligned tokens of /s/ and /ʃ/ to compare the retraction of /s/ in consonant clusters in American and Scottish English.…”
Section: Examples Of Computational Sociophonetic Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%