Ostry D J, Gribble P L, Gracco V L
McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
J Neurosci. 1996 Feb 15;16(4):1570-9. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.16-04-01570.1996.
Coarticulation in speech production is a phenomenon in which the articulator movements for a given speech sound vary systematically with the surrounding sounds and their associated movements. Although these variations may seem to be planned centrally, without explicit models of the speech articulators, the kinematic patterns that are attributable to central control cannot be distinguished from those that arise because of dynamics and are not represented in the underlying control signals. We address the origins of coarticulation by comparing the results of empirical and modeling studies of jaw motion in speech. The simulated kinematics of sagittal-plane jaw rotation and horizontal jaw translation are compared with the results of empirical studies in which subjects produce speech-like sequences at a normal rate and volume. The simulations examine both "anticipatory" and "carryover" coarticulatory effects. In both cases, the results show that even when no account is taken of context at the level of central control, kinematic patterns vary in amplitude and duration as a function of the magnitude of the preceding or following movement, in the same manner as that observed empirically in coarticulation. Because at least some coarticulatory effects may arise from muscle mechanics and jaw dynamics and not from central control, these factors must be considered before drawing inferences about control in coarticulation.
言语产生中的协同发音是一种现象,即给定语音的发音器官运动随周围声音及其相关运动而系统地变化。尽管这些变化似乎是在中枢进行规划的,但如果没有语音发音器官的明确模型,就无法区分可归因于中枢控制的运动模式与那些由动力学产生且未在潜在控制信号中体现的运动模式。我们通过比较言语中下颌运动的实证研究和建模研究结果来探讨协同发音的起源。将矢状面下颌旋转和水平下颌平移的模拟运动学与实证研究结果进行比较,在实证研究中,受试者以正常语速和音量发出类似言语的序列。模拟研究考察了“预期”和“延续”协同发音效应。在这两种情况下,结果都表明,即使在中枢控制层面不考虑语境,运动模式的幅度和持续时间也会根据前一个或后一个运动的大小而变化,这与在协同发音中实证观察到的方式相同。由于至少一些协同发音效应可能源于肌肉力学和下颌动力学,而非中枢控制,因此在对协同发音中的控制进行推断之前,必须考虑这些因素。