Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1100919 Journal of Phonetics 2012 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study examines the production and perception of Intonational Phrase (IP) boundaries. In particular, it investigates (1) whether the articulatory events that occur at IP boundaries can exhibit temporal distinctions that would indicate a difference in degree of disjuncture, and (2) to what extent listeners are sensitive to the effects of such differences among IP boundaries. Two experiments investigate these questions. An articulatory kinematic experiment examines the effects of structural differences between IP boundaries on the production of those boundaries. In a perception experiment listeners then evaluate the strength of the junctures occurring in the utterances produced in the production study. The results of the studies provide support for the existence of prosodic strength differences among IP boundaries and also demonstrate a close link between the production and perception of prosodic boundaries. The results are discussed in the context of possible linguistic structural explanations, with implications for cognitive accounts for the creation, implementation, and processing of prosody.

► Articulatory and perceptual experimental evaluation of prosodic boundary strength. ► Systematic prosodic strength differences among Intonational Phrase boundaries demonstrated. ► A close link between the production and perception of prosodic boundaries shown.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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