Structure in mind, structure in vocal tract

We update our understanding of the view that grammar regulates inter-segmental temporal coordination and present an extension of that view to a new domain: we argue that inter-segmental coordination is basic to prosody. It is the glue joining segments together differently in different languages (here, illustrated with examples from Arabic and Spanish) and orchestrates their unfolding in ways corresponding to constructs posited in theoretical analysis. The correspondence is one between organization in mind-brain and organization in vocal tract. Moreover, for both mind-brain and vocal tract, the organization is phonological and abstract. It is so because it holds over segments of various identities: in Arabic, the first segment in / / is not prosodified as part of the same unit as / / and this holds true also for / /, / / and so on, regardless of sonority. In contrast, in English or Spanish, a different organization holds. Crucially, uniformity in organization (same organization presiding over sequences with varying segmental makeup) does not imply uniqueness of phonetic exponents: prosodic organization is pleiotropic, simultaneously expressed by more than one phonetic exponent. Finally, two properties of coordination relations are underscored: lawful flexibility and abstractness. The first is revealed in the degrees of freedom with which movements corresponding to any given effector begin; the second in invariances of task-relevant kinematic signatures regardless of the effectors implicated in any given segmental sequence. Once again, abstract phonological structure is mirrored in vocal tracts via coordination relations holding across physiology and the particular modes of its operation.

[1]  Travis G. Bradley Gestural Timing and Derived Environment Effects in Norwegian Clusters , 2002 .

[2]  D. Byrd C-Centers Revisited , 1995 .

[3]  Andreas Zierdt,et al.  DEVELOPMENT OF A SYSTEM FOR THREE-DIMENSIONAL FLESHPOINT MEASUREMENT OF SPEECH MOVEMENTS , 1999 .

[4]  Adamantios I. Gafos,et al.  A Grammar of Gestural Coordination , 2002 .

[5]  P. Keating,et al.  Articulatory strengthening at edges of prosodic domains. , 1997, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[6]  R Core Team,et al.  R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .

[7]  B. Elson,et al.  Sierra Popoluca Syllable Structure , 1947, International Journal of American Linguistics.

[8]  John J. McCarthy Prosodic structure in morphology , 1984 .

[9]  Adamantios I. Gafos,et al.  Stochastic Time Models of Syllable Structure , 2015, PloS one.

[10]  A. Boudlal Constraint Interaction in the Phonology and Morphology of Casablanca Moroccan Arabic , 2001 .

[11]  A. Kaye,et al.  Ablaut and Ambiguity: Phonology of a Moroccan Arabic Dialect , 1989 .

[12]  P. Smolensky,et al.  Optimality Theory: Constraint Interaction in Generative Grammar , 2004 .

[13]  Mohamed Elmedlaoui What does the Moroccan Malħun meter compute, and how? , 2014 .

[14]  Lisa Davidson,et al.  THE ATOMS OF PHONOLOGICAL REPRESENTATION: GESTURES, COORDINATION AND PERCEPTUAL FEATURES IN CONSONANT CLUSTER PHONOTACTICS , 2003 .

[15]  Donca Steriade,et al.  ALTERNATIVES TO SYLLABLE-BASED ACCOUNTS OF CONSONANTAL PHONOTACTICS , 2000 .

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

[17]  A. Gafos,et al.  The Gesture as an Autonomous Nonlinear Dynamical System , 2016 .

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

[19]  Adamantios I. Gafos,et al.  The Articulatory Basis of Locality in Phonology , 1999 .

[20]  Outi Bat-El,et al.  Stem modification and cluster transfer in Modern Hebrew , 1994 .

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

[22]  C. Habel,et al.  Language , 1931, NeuroImage.

[23]  F. Dell,et al.  Syllabic Consonants in Berber: Some New Evidence , 1988 .

[24]  Philip Hoole,et al.  Beyond 2D in articulatory data acquisition and analysis , 2003 .

[25]  F H Guenther,et al.  Speech sound acquisition, coarticulation, and rate effects in a neural network model of speech production. , 1995, Psychological review.

[26]  Stefan Benus,et al.  Gestural coordination and the distribution of English 'geminates' , 2004 .

[27]  N. A. Bernshteĭn The co-ordination and regulation of movements , 1967 .

[28]  Philipp Sebastian Angermeyer Copying Contiguous Gestures: An Articulatory Account of Bella Coola Reduplication , 2003 .

[29]  L Saltzman Elliot,et al.  A Dynamical Approach to Gestural Patterning in Speech Production , 1989 .

[30]  Nancy Elizabeth Hall,et al.  Gestures and Segments: Vowel Intrusion as Overlap , 2003 .

[31]  Noam Chomsky,et al.  The Sound Pattern of English , 1968 .

[32]  D. Barr,et al.  Random effects structure for confirmatory hypothesis testing: Keep it maximal. , 2013, Journal of memory and language.

[33]  Jeffrey D. Ullman,et al.  Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages and Computation , 1979 .

[34]  Adamantios I. Gafos,et al.  Syllabification in Moroccan Arabic: evidence from patterns of temporal stability in articulation* , 2009, Phonology.

[35]  Mariapaola D'Imperio,et al.  Variation in overlap and phonological grammar in Moroccan Arabic clusters , 2010 .

[36]  Dani Byrd,et al.  Influences on articulatory timing in consonant sequences , 1996 .

[37]  Louis Goldstein,et al.  Back to the past tense in English * , 2010 .

[38]  Mariapaola D'Imperio,et al.  At the juncture of prosody, phonology, and phonetics – the interaction of phrasal and syllable structure in shaping the timing of consonant gestures , 2010 .

[39]  F. Dell,et al.  On consonant releases in Imdlawn Tashlhiyt Berber , 1996 .

[40]  D. Kahn,et al.  Syllable-Based Generalizations in English Phonology , 2015 .

[41]  G. Clements Papers in Laboratory Phonology: The role of the sonority cycle in core syllabification , 1990 .

[42]  Travis G. Bradley Spanish complex onsets and the phonetics–phonology interface , 2007 .

[43]  Travis G. Bradley Morphological derived-environment effects in gestural coordination: A case study of Norwegian clusters , 2007 .

[44]  P. Ladefoged,et al.  Fundamental problems in phonetics , 1977 .

[45]  Richard Wright,et al.  Consonant Clusters and Cue Preservation in Tsou , 1996 .

[46]  Lasse Bombien,et al.  Articulatory overlap as a function of voicing in French and German consonant clusters. , 2013, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[47]  Jason Adams,et al.  Interacting effects of syllable and phrase position on consonant articulation. , 2005, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[48]  Noam Chomsky,et al.  वाक्यविन्यास का सैद्धान्तिक पक्ष = Aspects of the theory of syntax , 1965 .

[49]  Elizabeth Casserly,et al.  Gestures in optimality theory and the laryngeal phonology of Faroese , 2012 .

[50]  Phil Hoole,et al.  Five-dimensional articulography , 2009 .

[51]  J. C. Catford,et al.  A practical introduction to phonetics , 1988 .

[52]  D. Bates,et al.  Parsimonious Mixed Models , 2015, 1506.04967.

[53]  D. Bates,et al.  Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4 , 2014, 1406.5823.

[54]  Jonah Katz,et al.  Compression effects in English , 2012, J. Phonetics.

[55]  M H Cohen,et al.  Electromagnetic midsagittal articulometer systems for transducing speech articulatory movements. , 1992, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[56]  Rachid Ridouane,et al.  Tashlhiyt's ban of complex syllable onsets: phonetic and perceptual evidence , 2014 .

[57]  H. Frank,et al.  Statistics: concepts and applications , 1996 .

[58]  Marianne L. Borroff A landmark underspecification account of the patterning of glottal stop , 2007 .

[59]  D. Steriade CLOSURE, RELEASE, AND NASAL CONTOURS , 1993 .

[60]  John M. Keegan 16. The Role of Syllabic Structure in the Phonology of Moroccan Arabic , 1986 .

[61]  P. Brockhoff,et al.  lmerTest: Tests for random and fixed effects for linear mixed effect models (lmer objects of lme4 package) , 2014 .

[62]  Marianne Pouplier,et al.  The Atoms of Phonological Representations , 2011 .

[63]  Jeffrey D. Ullman,et al.  Formal languages and their relation to automata , 1969, Addison-Wesley series in computer science and information processing.

[64]  Elliot Saltzman,et al.  Dynamics and coordinate systems in skilled sensorimotor activity , 1996 .

[65]  Dani Byrd,et al.  Articulatory timing in English consonant sequences , 1994 .

[66]  D. Cox,et al.  An Analysis of Transformations , 1964 .

[67]  D. Choi At the juncture of prosody , phonology , and phonetics — The interaction of phrasal and syllable structure in shaping the timing of consonant gestures , 2007 .

[68]  P. Kiparsky The Syllable in Optimality Theory: Syllables and Moras in Arabic , 2003 .

[69]  Lisa Davidson,et al.  Schwa Elision in Fast Speech: Segmental Deletion or Gestural Overlap? , 2006, Phonetica.

[70]  Sharon Inkelas,et al.  A Q-Theoretic approach to distinctive subsegmental timing , 2018 .

[71]  Paul Smolensky On Theoretical Facts and Empirical Abstractions , 2006 .

[72]  F. Dell,et al.  Syllabic Consonants and Syllabification in Imdlawn Tashlhiyt Berber , 1985 .

[73]  Dani Byrd,et al.  The elastic phrase: modeling the dynamics of boundary-adjacent lengthening , 2003, J. Phonetics.

[74]  F. Dell,et al.  Syllable Structure in Moroccan Arabic , 2002 .