Certain of the complex spectral effects of vowel nasalization bear a resemblance to the effects of modifying the tongue or jaw position with which the vowel is produced. Perceptual evidence suggests that listener misperceptions of nasal vowel height arise as a result of this resemblance. Whereas previous studies examined isolated nasal vowels, this research focused on the role of phonetic context in shaping listeners’ judgments of nasal vowel height. Identification data obtained from native American English speakers indicated that nasal coupling does not necessarily lead to listener misperceptions of vowel quality when the vowel’s nasality is coarticulatory in nature. The perceived height of contextually nasalized vowels (in a [bṼnd] environment) did not differ from that of oral vowels (in a [bṼd] environment) produced with the same tongue–jaw configuration. In contrast, corresponding noncontextually nasalized vowels (in a [bṼd] environment) were perceived as lower in quality than vowels in the other two conditions. Presumably the listeners’ lack of experience with distinctive vowel nasalization prompted them to resolve the spectral effects of noncontextual nasalization in terms of tongue or jaw height, rather than velic height. The implications of these findings with respect to sound changes affecting nasal vowel height are also discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Krakow, R. A., Beddor, P. S., Goldstein, L. M., & Fowler, C. A. (1988). Coarticulatory influences on the perceived height of nasal vowels. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 83(3), 1146–1158. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.396059
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.