The timing of prenuclear high accents in English

  • Silverman K
  • Pierrehumbert J
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Abstract

In English, the alignment of intonation peaks with their syllables exhibits a great deal of contextually governed variation. Understanding this variation is of theoretical interest, and modeling it correctly is important for good quality intonation synthesis. An experimental study of the alignment of prenuclear accent peaks with their associated syllables will be described. Two speakers produced repetitions of names of the form “Ma Lemm,” “Mom LeMann,” “Mamalie Lemonick,” and “Mama Lemonick,” with all combinations of the four first names and three surnames. Segmental durations and the F0 peak location in the first name were measured. Results show that although both speaking rate and prosodic context affect syllable duration, they exert different influences on peak alignment. Specifically, when a syllable is lengthened by a word boundary (e.g., Ma Le Man versus Mama Lemm) or stress clash (e.g., Ma Lemm), the peak falls disproportionately earlier in the vowel. This seems to be related to the syllable-internal durational patterns. It is concluded that rules for generating phonetic details from phonological structure must access information about the upcoming prosodic context.

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Silverman, K. E. A., & Pierrehumbert, J. B. (1987). The timing of prenuclear high accents in English. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 82(S1), S19–S19. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.2024693

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