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P1254325720szSxd

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Affricate unvoiced, voiced ch, jh. Aspiration h. Flap dx, nx ... English has two affricates: /ch/ /t sh/ /jh/ /d zh/ Sometimes cue to affricate is in burst ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: P1254325720szSxd


1
CSE 551 Structure of Spoken Language Lecture 5
Characteristics of Manner of Articulation John-Pa
ul Hosom Fall 2004
2
  • Self-Study
  • If you want to look at spectrograms of your own
    voice, there
  • are several programs available
  • Matlab Use the specgram command color map can
    be changed using colormap gray or similar
    commands
  • CSLU Toolkit Download from http//www.cslu.ogi
    .edu/toolkit Registration required but free for
    educational use Plot spectrograms with
    SpeechView tool.
  • Praat Download from http//www.fon.hum.uva.nl/p
    raat/ Free and available for windows, lunix,
    Macintosh, etc.

3
Two Vowels preempt
4
Two Vowels heavy oak
5
Two Vowels reapply
6
Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
Articulation Approximately 8 manners of
articulation Name Sub-Types
Examples .
Vowel vowel, diphthong aa, iy, uw, eh, ow,
Approximant liquid, glide l, r, w,
y Nasal m, n, ng Stop unvoiced,
voiced p, t, k, b, d, g Fricative unvoiced,
voiced f, th, s, sh, v, dh, z,
zh Affricate unvoiced, voiced ch,
jh Aspiration h Flap dx,
nx Change in manner of articulation usually
abrupt and visible manner provides much
information about location of phonemes.
7
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Approximants (/l/, /r/, /w/, /y/)
  • vowel-like properties, but more constriction
  • /l/ has tongue-tip touching alveolar ridge,/r/
    has tongue tip curled up/back (retroflex), raised
    and bunched dorsum, sides of tongue touching
    molars,/w/ has tongue back and lips rounded,/y/
    has tongue toward front and very high
  • glides (/w/, /y/) can be viewed as extreme
    productionof a vowel (sometimes called
    semivowels) /w/ ? /uw/ /y/ ? /iy/

8
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Approximants (/l/, /r/, /w/, /y/)
  • movement of tongue slower than other
    vowel-to-vowelor consonant-to-vowel transitions,
    but not as slow asdiphthong movement
  • sometimes voiceless when following a voiceless
    plosive (play)
  • /l/ may have slight discontinuity when tongue
    makes/breakscontact with alveolar ridge other
    approximants have nodiscontinuity

9
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Nasal (/m/, /n/, /ng/)
  • produced with velic port open and lips closed
  • sound travels through nasal cavities
  • these cavities filter speech with both poles
    (resonances)and zeros (anti-resonances)
  • longer pathway causes primary resonance to be low
    (220-300 Hz)
  • anti-resonances cause higher frequencies to have
    lower power

F1
P1
F3
F2
P2
F4
/m/
F5
F6
Z1
Z2
10
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Nasal (/m/, /n/, /ng/)
  • formant structure obscured by pole-zero pairs
  • all three English nasals look and sound similar
    (place of articulation has little effect on
    spectrum)can be distinguished primarily by
    coarticulatory effects on adjacent vowel(s).
  • sometimes very brief duration (camp, winner)
  • occasional confusion with /w/, /l/ (if F3 not
    visible), andclosure portion of voiced stops
  • often sharp discontinuity with adjacent vowel
  • adjacent vowel may be nasalized

11
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Stop (Plosive) (/p/, /t/, /k/, /b/, /d/, /g/)
  • closure along vocal tract (lips, alveolar ridge,
    velum)
  • buildup of air pressure behind closure
  • release of closure
  • burst of air
  • possible aspiration following burst
  • complex process, several changes over brief time
    span
  • some context-dependent attributes, some
    semi-invariant ones
  • voiced bursts sometimes have voice bar in
    low-frequency region, caused by vocal fold
    vibration withcomplete oral and velic closure.
  • sometimes voice bar is excellent cue sometimes
    can be confused with a nasal

12
Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
Articulation
/p ah p/ /t ah
t/ /k ah k/
13
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Stop (Plosive) (/p/, /t/, /k/, /b/, /d/, /g/)
  • closure and time required to build pressure
    results insilence region of spectrum prior to
    burst
  • burst airflow is a step function, which becomes
    similarto an impulse, which has equal energy at
    all frequencies
  • identity of a plosive contained in (at least)
    three areas (1) voice-onset-time (VOT) /
    duration of aspiration (2) formant transitions
    in neighboring vowels/approximants (3) spectral
    shape of burst
  • voiced plosives may not show any real voicing
    (!)

14
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Fricative (/f/, /th/, /s/, /sh/, /v/, /dh/, /z/,
    /zh/)
  • fricatives produced by forcing air through a
    constrictionin the mouth
  • constriction located anywhere from the
    labiodental region (/f/, /v/) to palato-alveolar
    region (/sh/, /zh/)
  • all English fricatives come in voiced and
    unvoiced varieties
  • voicing may not be present in voiced fricatives
    (!), makingduration an important distinguishing
    cue (voiced ? shorter)
  • the location and type of the constriction create
    spectralanti-resonances as well as resonances
  • the main difference between /s/ and /f/ is in
    frequenciesabove 4000 Hz telephone-band speech
    has limit of 4KHz.

15
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Affricate (/ch/, /jh/)
  • Affricates are conceptually like diphthongs two
    separatephonemes considered as one
  • English has two affricates /ch/ ? /t
    sh/ /jh/ ? /d zh/
  • Sometimes cue to affricate is in burst preceding
    fricativein closure between vowel and
    fricative.
  • Sometimes cue to affricate is in voicing or
    duration.

16
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Aspiration (/h/)
  • like vowels, except usually no voicing
  • can usually see formant structure
  • formant patterns similar to surrounding vowel(s)

/ah h aw
s/ a house
17
  • Acoustic-Phonetic Features Manner of
    Articulation
  • Flaps (/dx/, /nx/)
  • allophone of /t/, /d/, or /n/
  • very brief duration no closure for /dx/
  • indicated by dip in energy and F2 near 1800 Hz

write another
18
  • Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
  • usually can divide fricatives into strong and
    weakstrong /s/, /sh/, /z/, /zh/weak /f/,
    /v/, /th/, /dh/
  • voicing may be present only in transition into a
    voicedfricative sometimes not at all
  • voiced fricatives tend to be shorter than
    unvoiced, relative to the duration of the
    neighboring vowel
  • place of articulation causes some change in
    spectral shape/sh/ and /zh/ have greater energy
    at lower frequency than /s/, /z/

19
  • Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
  • /th/ sometimes has adjacent vowels F3, F4, F5
    extend into /th/,in contrast with /f/
  • /th/ and /f/ often have weak energy during middle
    part offricative
  • sometimes /f/ and /th/ best distinguished by
    formant transitionsof neighboring vowel(s) more
    labial vs. more alveolarcharacteristics of
    transitions.
  • sometimes /f/ has strong low-frequency energy
    (breath noise in a close-talking microphone)
  • sometimes /th/ has more high-frequency energy
    above 4 kHz

20
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/f iy th iy
s iy sh iy/
21
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/v iy dh iy z
iy zh iy/
22
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/f ah th ah
s ah sh ah/
23
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/v ah dh ah
z ah zh ah/
24
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/f aa th aa
s aa sh aa/
25
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/v aa dh aa z
aa zh aa/
26
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/iy f iy th
iy s iy sh/
27
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/iy v iy dh
iy z iy zh/
28
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/ah f ah th
ah s ah sh/
29
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/ah v ah dh ah
z ah zh/
30
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/aa f aa th aa
s aa sh/
31
Spectrogram Reading Fricatives
/aa v aa dh aa
z aa zh/
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