The effects of coarticulation and morphological complexity on the production of English coda clusters: Acoustic and articulatory evidence from 2-year-olds and adults using ultrasound

Most studies of phonological development have explored the acquisition of segments, syllables and words using perceptual/transcription methods. Less is known about the articulatory aspects of early speech, or the development of articulatory-acoustic mapping. Recent research on adult speech finds that coarticulation effects are evidenced in both the acoustics and the articulatory gestures, and suggests tighter coarticulation and less variability for monomorphemic compared to polymorphemic segment sequences. The present study explored phonological context and morphological effects in the speech of five adults and five 2-year-olds, combining acoustic and articulatory analysis from ultrasound recordings. The results show that coarticulation effects are found in the word-final consonant cluster (box) for both adults and children. For children, these were evidenced only in the articulatory data. In addition, both age groups showed differences in tongue height between the monomorphemic (box) and bimorphemic (rocks) clusters, suggesting a possible morphological effect. These findings confirm that ultrasound methods can be successfully employed to explore aspects of early gestural development in children as young as 2, and raise many questions regarding the nature of speech planning processes as a function of lexical versus morphological form.

[1]  Marlys A. Macken,et al.  The acquisition of the voicing contrast in English: a study of voice onset time in word-initial stop consonants , 1980, Journal of Child Language.

[2]  C. Browman,et al.  Some Notes on Syllable Structure in Articulatory Phonology , 1988, Phonetica.

[3]  Rachel M. Theodore,et al.  Acoustic evidence for positional and complexity effects on children's production of plural -s. , 2011, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[4]  A. Butcher,et al.  An electropalatographic investigation of coarticulation in VCV sequences , 1976 .

[5]  Bryan Gick,et al.  A motor differentiation model for liquid substitutions in children's speech , 2007 .

[6]  Elizabeth C. Zsiga Acoustic evidence for gestural overlap in consonant sequences , 1994 .

[7]  John Kingston,et al.  Between the grammar and physics of speech , 1994 .

[8]  Paul Boersma,et al.  Praat: doing phonetics by computer , 2003 .

[9]  Sun-Young Oh,et al.  Toward universals in the gestural organization of syllables: A cross-linguistic study of liquids , 2006, J. Phonetics.

[10]  W. Hardcastle,et al.  An instrumental investigation of coarticulation in stop consonant sequences , 1979 .

[11]  Daniel Recasens,et al.  Coarticulation, assimilation and blending in Catalan consonant clusters , 2001, J. Phonetics.

[12]  S R Baum,et al.  Acoustic analyses and perceptual data on anticipatory labial coarticulation in adults and children. , 1985, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[13]  Jennifer Culbertson,et al.  Word-minimality, Epenthesis and Coda Licensing in the Early Acquisition of English , 2006, Language and speech.

[14]  W. Levelt,et al.  Speaking: From Intention to Articulation , 1990 .

[15]  Keith A. Johnson Quantitative Methods In Linguistics , 2008 .

[16]  P Tallal,et al.  Anticipatory coarticulation in the speech of adults and young children: acoustic, perceptual, and video data. , 1991, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[17]  Jérôme Aubin Compensation for a labial perturbation : An acoustic and articulatory study of child and adult French speakers , 2006 .

[18]  Min Li,et al.  Snake for Band Edge Extraction and Its Applications , 2003, Computer Graphics and Imaging.

[19]  Alice Turk,et al.  Acoustic segment durations in prosodic research: a practical guide , 2006 .

[20]  N. Hewlett,et al.  Coarticulation as an indicator of speech motor control development in children: an ultrasound study. , 2011, Motor control.

[21]  L. Gerken PROSODIC STRUCTURE IN YOUNG CHILDREN'S LANGUAGE PRODUCTION , 1996 .

[22]  R. Baayen,et al.  Mixed-effects modeling with crossed random effects for subjects and items , 2008 .

[23]  N. Hewlett,et al.  An ultrasound study of lingual coarticulation in /sV/ syllables produced by adults and typically developing children , 2012, Journal of the International Phonetic Association.

[24]  Satrajit S. Ghosh,et al.  GESTURAL PHASING IN /KT/ SEQUENCES CONTRASTING WITHIN AND CROSS WORD CONTEXTS , 2007 .

[25]  Allen A. Montgomery,et al.  Targeting Intelligible Speech: A Phonological Approach to Remediation , 1984 .

[26]  Lucie Ménard,et al.  The development of lingual gestures in speech: experimental approach to language development. , 2011, Faits de langues.

[27]  Frank Parker,et al.  The duration of morphemic and non-morphemic /s/ in English , 1983 .

[28]  Katherine S White,et al.  Sub-Segmental Detail in Early Lexical Representations. , 2008 .

[29]  Daniel Recasens,et al.  The effect of syllable position on consonant reduction (evidence from Catalan consonant clusters) , 2004, J. Phonetics.

[30]  L. Fenson,et al.  Lexical development norms for young children , 1996 .

[31]  Kenneth N Stevens,et al.  Toward a model for lexical access based on acoustic landmarks and distinctive features. , 2002, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[32]  Amanda L Miller,et al.  Corrected high-frame rate anchored ultrasound with software alignment. , 2011, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[33]  A. Imbrie,et al.  Acoustical study of the development of stop consonants in children , 2003 .

[34]  R. Brown,et al.  A First Language , 1973 .

[35]  William J. Hardcastle,et al.  Some phonetic and syntactic constraints on lingual coarticulation during /kl/ sequences , 1985, Speech Commun..

[36]  Richard S. McGowan,et al.  The Emergence of Phonetic Segments , 1989 .

[37]  Taehong Cho,et al.  Effects of Morpheme Boundaries on Intergestural Timing: Evidence from Korean , 2001, Phonetica.

[38]  Paul Boersma,et al.  Praat, a system for doing phonetics by computer , 2002 .

[39]  Louis Goldstein,et al.  Towards an articulatory phonology , 1986, Phonology.

[40]  Andries W. Coetzee,et al.  Gestural Reduction and Sound Change: An Ultrasound Study , 2011, ICPhS.

[41]  Stop‐vowel coarticulation in 3‐year‐old, 5‐year‐old, and adult speakers , 1985 .

[42]  K. Demuth,et al.  Phonological constraints on children's production of English third person singular -s. , 2009, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[43]  David Crystal,et al.  A dictionary of linguistics and phonetics , 1997 .

[44]  Emmerich Kelih,et al.  Quantitative methods in linguistics , 2010, J. Quant. Linguistics.

[45]  V. Mann,et al.  Fricative-stop coarticulation: acoustic and perceptual evidence. , 1981 .

[46]  Lisa Davidson Addressing phonological questions with ultrasound , 2005, Clinical linguistics & phonetics.

[47]  C. Browman,et al.  Papers in Laboratory Phonology: Tiers in articulatory phonology, with some implications for casual speech , 1990 .

[48]  D. Klatt Linguistic uses of segmental duration in English: acoustic and perceptual evidence. , 1976, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[49]  B. Gick,et al.  Articulation without acoustics: A case study of Oneida utterance‐final forms , 2006 .

[50]  B. Gick,et al.  Speech habilitation of hard of hearing adolescents using electropalatography and ultrasound as evaluated by trained listeners , 2003, Clinical linguistics & phonetics.

[51]  M. Stone A guide to analysing tongue motion from ultrasound images , 2005, Clinical linguistics & phonetics.

[52]  J. Scobbie,et al.  Covert contrast as a stage in the acquisition of phonetics and phonology. , 2000 .

[53]  Elisabeth Dévière,et al.  Analyzing linguistic data: a practical introduction to statistics using R , 2009 .

[54]  Dion Scott,et al.  Electropalatographic assessment of tongue-to-palate contact patterns and variability in children, adolescents, and adults. , 2007, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[55]  Joan L. Bybee,et al.  Word frequency and context of use in the lexical diffusion of phonetically conditioned sound change , 2002, Language Variation and Change.

[56]  Joseph S. Perkell,et al.  Gestural timing effects in the ‘‘perfect memory’’ sequence observed under three rates by electromagnetometry , 2001 .

[57]  C. Marshall,et al.  The impact of phonological complexity on past tense inflection in children with Grammatical-SLI , 2007 .

[58]  Cecilia J. Kirk,et al.  Asymmetries in the acquisition of word-initial and word-final consonant clusters , 2005, Journal of Child Language.

[59]  Bruce L. Smith Temporal aspects of English speech production: A developmental perspective , 1978 .

[60]  Lucie Ménard,et al.  Measuring Tongue Shapes and Positions with Ultrasound Imaging: A Validation Experiment Using an Articulatory Model , 2011, Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica.