Speech segment durations and quantity in Icelandic.

Icelandic has a phonologic contrast of quantity, distinguishing long and short vowels and consonants. Perceptual studies have shown that a major cue for quantity in perception is relational, involving the vowel-to-rhyme ratio. This cue is approximately invariant under transformations of rate, thus yielding a higher-order invariant for the perception of quantity in Icelandic. Recently it has, however, been shown that vowel spectra can also influence the perception of quantity. This holds for vowels which have different spectra in their long and short varieties. This finding raises the question of whether the durational contrast is less well articulated in those cases where vowel spectra provide another cue for quantity. To test this possibility, production measurements were carried out on vowels and consonants in words which were spoken by a number of speakers at different utterance rates in two experiments. A simple neural network was then trained on the production measurements. Using the network to classify the training stimuli shows that the durational distinctions between long and short phonemes are as clearly articulated whether or not there is a secondary, spectral, cue to quantity.

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