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      Perceptual assessment of fricative–stop coarticulation

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      The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
      Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

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          Abstract

          The perceptual dependence of stop consonants on preceding fricatives [Mann and Repp, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 69, 548--558 (1981)] was further investigated in two experiments employing both natural and synthetic speech. These experiments consistently replicated our original finding that listeners, report velar stops following [s]. In addition, our data confirmed earlier reports that natural fricative noises (excerpted from utterances of [st alpha], [sk alpha], [(formula: see text)k alpha]) contain cues to the following stop consonants; this was revealed in subjects' identifications of stops from isolated fricative noises and from stimuli consisting of these noises followed by synthetic CV portions drawn from a [t alpha]--[k alpha] continuum. However, these cues in the noise portion could not account for the contextual effect of fricative identity ([formula: see text] versus [sp) on stop perception (more "k" responses following [s]). Rather, this effect seems to be related to a coarticulatory influence of a preceding fricative on stop production; Subjects' responses to excised natural CV portions (with bursts and aspiration removed) were biased towards a relatively more forward place of stop articulation when the CVs had originally been preceded by [s]; and the identification of a preceding ambiguous fricative was biased in the direction of the original fricative context in which a given CV portion had been produced. These findings support an articulatory explanation for the effect of preceding fricatives on stop consonant perception.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
          The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
          Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
          0001-4966
          April 1981
          April 1981
          : 69
          : 4
          : 1154-1163
          Article
          10.1121/1.385695
          7229203
          a0dcce00-1a3e-49e1-bfe3-738936cfc063
          © 1981
          History

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