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Smiled speech in a context-invariant model of coarticulation

Smiling during speech requires concurrent and often conflicting demands on the articulators. Thus, speaking while smiling may be modeled as a type of coarticulation. This study explores whether a context-invariant or a context-sensitive model of coarticulation better accounts for the variation seen...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2015-04, Vol.137 (4_Supplement), p.2304-2304
Main Authors: Akinbo, Samuel, Heins, Thomas J., Keough, Megan, McClay, Elise K., Ozburn, Avery, Schwan, Michael D., Schellenberg, Murray, de Vries, Jonathan, Gick, Bryan
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Smiling during speech requires concurrent and often conflicting demands on the articulators. Thus, speaking while smiling may be modeled as a type of coarticulation. This study explores whether a context-invariant or a context-sensitive model of coarticulation better accounts for the variation seen in smiled versus neutral speech. While context-sensitive models assume some mechanism for planning of coarticulatory interactions [see Munhall et al., 2000, Lab Phon. V, 9–28], the simplest context-invariant models treat coarticulation as superposition [e.g., Joos, 1948, Language 24, 5–136]. In such a model, the intrinsic biomechanics of the body have been argued to account for many of the complex kinematic interactions associated with coarticulation [Gick et al., 2013, POMA 19, 060207]. Largely following the methods described in Fagel [2010, Dev. Multimod. Interf. 5967, 294–303], we examine articulatory variation in smiled versus neutral speech to test whether the local interactions of smiling and speech can be resolved in a context-invariant superposition model. Production results will be modeled using the ArtiSynth simulation platform (www.artisynth.org). Implications for theories of coarticulation will be discussed. [Research funded by NSERC.]
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.4920416