Vowel change across three age groups of speakers in three regional varieties of American English

This acoustic study examines sound (vowel) change in apparent time across three successive generations of 123 adult female speakers ranging in age from 20 to 65 years old, representing three regional varieties of American English, typical of western North Carolina, central Ohio and southeastern Wisconsin. A set of acoustic measures characterized the dynamic nature of formant trajectories, the amount of spectral change over the course of vowel duration and the position of the spectral centroid. The study found a set of systematic changes to /I, ε, æ/ including positional changes in the acoustic space (mostly lowering of the vowels) and significant variation in formant dynamics (increased monophthongization). This common sound change is evident in both emphatic (articulated clearly) and nonemphatic (casual) productions and occurs regardless of dialect-specific vowel dispersions in the vowel space. The cross-generational and cross-dialectal patterns of variation found here support an earlier report by Jacewicz, Fox, and Salmons (2011) which found this recent development in these three dialect regions in isolated citation-form words. While confirming the new North American Shift in different styles of production, the study underscores the importance of addressing the stress-related variation in vowel production in a careful and valid assessment of sound change.

[1]  Donald N. Tuten New Dialect Formation: The inevitability of colonial Englishes. By Peter Trudgill , 2006 .

[2]  James H. Sledd Breaking, Umlaut, and the Southern Drawl , 1966 .

[3]  P. Eckert,et al.  New Ways of Analyzing Sound Change , 1993 .

[4]  S. Clarke,et al.  The third dialect of English: Some Canadian evidence , 1995, Language Variation and Change.

[5]  R. Fox,et al.  Articulation rate across dialect, age, and gender , 2009, Language Variation and Change.

[6]  Björn Lindblom,et al.  The effect of emphatic stress on consonant vowel coarticulation. , 2007, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[7]  G. E. Peterson,et al.  Duration of Syllable Nuclei in English , 1960 .

[8]  R. Fox,et al.  Between-speaker and within-speaker variation in speech tempo of American English. , 2010, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[9]  Robin Dodsworth,et al.  CONVERGENCE IN BLUE-COLLAR COLUMBUS, OHIO, AFRICAN AMERICAN AND WHITE VOWEL SYSTEMS? , 2009 .

[10]  William Labov,et al.  The atlas of North American English : phonetics, phonology and sound change : a multimedia reference tool , 2006 .

[11]  B. Lindblom,et al.  Interaction between duration, context, and speaking style in English stressed vowels , 1994 .

[12]  Matthew J. Gordon,et al.  Small-Town Values and Big-City Vowels: A Study of the Northern Cities Shift in Michigan , 2000 .

[13]  M. Picheny,et al.  Speaking clearly for the hard of hearing. II: Acoustic characteristics of clear and conversational speech. , 1986, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[14]  Björn Lindblom,et al.  The Effect of Speaking Rate onConsonant Vowel Coarticulation , 2009, Phonetica.

[15]  Eivind Nessa Torgersen,et al.  Internal and external motivation in phonetic change: dialect levelling outcomes for an English vowel shift. , 2004 .

[16]  Charles Boberg The Canadian shift in Montreal , 2005, Language Variation and Change.

[17]  B. Lindblom Spectrographic Study of Vowel Reduction , 1963 .

[18]  Harold B. Allen,et al.  The linguistic atlas of the Upper Midwest , 1979 .

[19]  Richard Wright,et al.  The Hyperspace Effect: Phonetic Targets Are Hyperarticulated. , 1993 .

[20]  Dennis R. Preston Presidential Address: Where Are the Dialects of American English At Anyhow? , 2003 .

[21]  Raven I. McDavid,et al.  The pronunciation of English in the Atlantic States : based upon the collections of the linguistic atlas of the Eastern United States , 1963 .

[22]  E. Thomas An Acoustic Analysis of Vowel Variation in New World English , 2001 .

[23]  Ewa Jacewicz,et al.  Vowel Duration in Three American English Dialects. , 2007, American speech.

[25]  J. Hillenbrand,et al.  Acoustic characteristics of American English vowels. , 1994, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[26]  Robert Allen Fox,et al.  Cross-dialectal variation in formant dynamics of American English vowels. , 2009, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[27]  Cynthia G. Clopper,et al.  Acoustic characteristics of the vowel systems of six regional varieties of American English. , 2005, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[28]  C. M. Wise Southern American Dialect , 1933 .

[29]  Erik R. Thomas,et al.  Vowel Changes in Columbus, Ohio , 1989 .

[30]  D. Kewley-Port,et al.  Vowel intelligibility in clear and conversational speech for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners. , 2002, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[31]  W. Labov Principles Of Linguistic Change , 1994 .