Derrick Donald, Gick Bryan
New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain and Behaviour, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Phonetica. 2014;71(3):183-200. doi: 10.1159/000369630. Epub 2015 Feb 19.
Applying the 'end-state comfort' hypothesis of Rosenbaum et al. [J Exp Psych Learn Mem Cogn 1992;18:1058; Acta Psychol (Amst) 1996;94:59] to tongue motion provides evidence of long-distance subphonemic planning in speech. Speakers' tongue postures may anticipate upcoming speech up to three segments, two syllables, and a morpheme or word boundary later. We used M-mode ultrasound imaging to measure the direction of tongue tip/blade movements for known variants of flap/tap allophones of North American English /t/ and /d/. Results show that speakers produce different flap variants early in words or word sequences so as to facilitate the kinematic needs of flap/tap or other /r/ variants that appear later in the word or word sequence. Similar results were also observed across word boundaries, indicating that this is not a lexical effect.
将罗森鲍姆等人的“最终状态舒适度”假说[《实验心理学杂志:学习、记忆与认知》1992年;第18卷:第1058页;《心理学学报》(阿姆斯特丹)1996年;第94卷:第59页]应用于舌部运动,为言语中的远距离亚音素规划提供了证据。说话者的舌部姿势可能会提前预测即将到来的言语,最多提前三个音段、两个音节以及一个语素或单词边界。我们使用M型超声成像来测量北美英语/t/和/d/的闪音/轻拍音位变体的已知变体的舌尖/舌叶运动方向。结果表明,说话者在单词或单词序列的早期就产生不同的闪音变体,以便满足在单词或单词序列后期出现的闪音/轻拍音或其他/r/变体的运动学需求。在单词边界处也观察到了类似的结果,这表明这不是一种词汇效应。