Stop Consonant Voicing (and 2 nd language learning)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Phonemics The Study of Phonemes.
Advertisements

Tom Lentz (slides Ivana Brasileiro)
Rhotic Vowels 5. The Special Case of Vocalic /r/ This is the vowel in words like “bird,” “learn,” “nerd,” “sir” Symbol: /Ô/ (schwar) or /ÎÕ/ MacKay prefers.
JPN494: Japanese Language and Linguistics JPN543: Advanced Japanese Language and Linguistics Phonology & Phonetics (2)
Voice Onset Time (VOT) An Animated and Narrated Glossary of Terms used in Linguistics presents.
1 CS 551/651: Structure of Spoken Language Spectrogram Reading: Stops John-Paul Hosom Fall 2010.
Phonetics.
Major branches of phonetics 1. Experimental – How are speech sounds studied? 2. Articulatory – How are speech sounds produced? 3. Acoustic – What is the.
The sound patterns of language
Phonology, part 5: Features and Phonotactics
The Sound Patterns of Language: Phonology
Ling 240: Language and Mind Acquisition of Phonology.
Speech perception 2 Perceptual organization of speech.
Phonology October 24, 2012 Housekeeping To begin with... Phonetics homeworks to hand in! Then: Another Simpsons-based Quick Write Today: We start working.
Development of Speech Perception. Issues in the development of speech perception Are the mechanisms peculiar to speech perception evident in young infants?
d. Aspiration Voiced stops (in English) are never aspirated. Voiceless stops are sometimes aspirated and sometimes not. These voiceless stops will be.
PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY
Static Vowels ► Diphthongs ► Semivowels ► Stops Extending SF Theory to Accommodate Articulatory Movement.
Recognition of Voice Onset Time for Use in Detecting Pronunciation Variation ● Project Description ● What is Voice Onset Time (VOT)? – Physical Realization.
What is Phonetics? Short answer: The study of speech sounds in all their aspects. Phonetics is about describing speech. (Note: phonetics ¹ phonics) Phonetic.
Chapter three Phonology
NOVA Comprehensive Perspectives on Child Speech Development and Disorders Chapter 14 Acquisition of the English Voicing Contrast by Native Spanish-Speaking.
Phonetics October 10, 2012 Housekeeping Morphology homeworks are due!
The Description of Speech
Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.
Complementary and contrastive distribution
Phonology, phonotactics, and suprasegmentals
Phonetics HSSP Week 5.
…not the study of telephones!
Phonology, part 2 While you work on another Quick Write, here’s a funny painting of Superman based on a kid’s drawing: March 9, 2009.
Speech Perception 4/6/00 Acoustic-Perceptual Invariance in Speech Perceptual Constancy or Perceptual Invariance: –Perpetual constancy is necessary, however,
Phonology, part 4: Distinctive Features
PHONETICS & PHONOLOGY 3/24/2014. AGENDA GO OVER CORRECTED HOMEWORK IN PAIRS/SMALL GROUPS (5 MIN) MAKE ANY CORRECTIONS TO HWK DUE TODAY, THEN TURN IN (5.
Phonology Moats Ch. 3. Phonetics vs. Phonology  Remember, phonetics is the ability to pronounce individual speech sounds  Phonology is the awareness.
Acoustic Cues to Laryngeal Contrasts in Hindi Susan Jackson and Stephen Winters University of Calgary Acoustics Week in Canada October 14,
Phonology, part 2 October 29, 2012 While you work on another Quick Write, here’s a funny painting of Superman based on a kid’s drawing:
Phonetics February 7, 2012 Housekeeping Morphology homeworks are due!
Voice Onset Time + Voice Quality
Sensation & Perception
Phonology February 28, 2012 Housekeeping To begin with... Phonetics homeworks to hand in! Then: Another Simpsons-based Quick Write Today: We start working.
What is phonetics? Phonetics is the scientific study of speech sounds. It consists of three main sub-fields:  Articulatory phonetics  = how speech sounds.
ACE TESOL Diploma Program – London Language Institute OBJECTIVES You will understand: 1. The scope of the field of phonology; 2. The relevance of phonology.
Introduction to Phonetics & Phonology
Lecture 2 Phonology Sounds: Basic Principles. Definition Phonology is the component of linguistic knowledge concerned with rules, representations, and.
Phonation, Part 2 LIN Some confusion… Some of you are getting confused betweenPHONATION And Voiced Sounds… These 2 concepts ARE NOT the same!
Chapter 4: Phonology… …not the study of telephones! NOTES: The slides/lecture/discussion for this chapter deviate from the order of the book… You WILL.
Stop Consonant Voicing (and 2nd language learning)
Language Perception.
2.3 Distinctive features The idea of Distinctive Features was first developed by Roman Jacobson ( ) in the 1940s as a means of working out a set.
Phonetics and Phonology.
Rhotic Vowels 5. The Special Case of Vocalic R This is the vowel in words like “bird,” “learn,” “nerd,” “sir” Symbol: [ ɚ ] (schwar) or [ ɝ ] MacKay.
Phonology. Phonology is… The study of sound systems within a language The study of how speech sounds pattern The study of how speech sounds vary The study.
Against formal phonology (Port and Leary).  Generative phonology assumes:  Units (phones) are discrete (not continuous, not variable)  Phonetic space.
Phonology March 4, 2009 Today’s Plan To begin with... Phonetics homeworks to hand back With a few things to point out… Any questions about the mid-term?
Chapter 3 Phonetics.
Fricatives + Voice Onset Time November 25, 2015 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will.
Introduction to Linguistics
Acoustic phonetics: Concerned with describing the acoustics of speech. Also called speech acoustics. Big questions: (1) What are the relationships between.
Rhotic Vowels.
Introduction to Linguistics
Stop Consonant Voicing (and 2nd language learning)
Static Vowels ► Diphthongs ► Semivowels ► Stops
Step 1: Memorize IPA - practice quiz today - real quiz on Tuesday (over consonants)! Phonology is about looking for patterns and arguing your assessment.
Phonology Indah Lestari.
What is Phonetics? Short answer: The study of speech sounds in all their aspects. Phonetics is about describing speech. (Note: phonetics ¹ phonics) Phonetic.
Introduction to Linguistics
Stop Consonant Voicing (and 2nd language learning)
d. Aspiration Voiced stops (in English) are never aspirated.
Phonology.
Phonetics & Phonology 2.
Presentation transcript:

Stop Consonant Voicing (and 2 nd language learning)

The English phonemic inventory of stops includes 6 sounds: /b/ /d/ /g/(voiced, V+) /p/ /t/ /k/(unvoiced, V-) Voiced: Vocal folds buzz Unvoiced: Vocal folds dont buzz Should be simple to specify the articulatory and acoustic features that distinguish V+ from V-. It isnt. Why? (a) There are quite a few phonological rules that apply to voicing distinctions. (b) The details vary with context, especially initial vs. final stops. Were going to stick with initial stops.

Main feature: Voice-onset time: Articulatory definition: Interval between articulatory release and the onset of voicing; e.g., if the vocal folds start vibrating 20 ms following release, VOT=20 ms. Thats it. Acoustic definition: Burst-to-buzz interval – interval between the burst of noise signaling articulatory release and the onset of periodic vibration. e.g., if periodic vibration follows the release burst by, VOT=20 ms. Two different ways of saying the same thing.

Release & voicing ~simultaneous VOT = ~0 Release Voicing onset VOT = ~115 ms [pHA ] [bA]

Voice Onset Time (VOT) VOT = Interval between articulatory release and onset of voicing. voicing onset release [p h A ] [bA ] voicing onset and release ~ simultaneous VOT ~0 msec VOT ~85 msec

Voice Onset Time (VOT) voicing onset release [p h A t] [spA t] Very short delay between release and voicing onset (~10 ms) VOT ~10 msec VOT ~85 msec

[spAt] (unaspirated [p]) With [s] edited out

pack [p h Qk] capping [k h QpIN] (aspirated [p]) (lightly aspirated [p]) /p/ precedes stressed vowel (aspirated) /p/ precedes unstressed vowel (unaspirated or lightly aspirated)

One more wrinkle. English has two phonological (phonemic) voicing categories, but in VOT terms, there are three. short lag leadlong lag release & voicing ~simultaneous voicing precedes release longish delay betw. release & voicing

10 Another Example of Short-Lag, Lead (pre- voiced), and Long-Lag (aspirated) VOTs (For the long-lag [i.e., aspirated] stop, note that F 1 is very weak during the aspiration interval. This is sometime called the F 1 -cutback cue.)

phonologically voiced (allophonic variants) of /d/ short lag leadlong lag release & voicing ~simultaneous voicing precedes release longish delay betw. release & voicing phonologically unvoiced

phonologically voiced (allophonic variants) of /d/ short lag leadlong lag In English, these two are in free variation phonologically unvoiced

13 Left-to-right: The Spanish word peso as it might be mispronounced by a native English speaker (its aspirated; it shouldnt be). The Spanish word beso (kiss) as it might be spoken by a native Spanish speaker. The Spanish word peso ) as it might be spoken by a native Spanish speaker.

Whats the Lesson Here? Languages divide up the phonetic world in different ways. This is a very important idea. English: Phonol. V+ Phonol. V- Lead Short-Lag Long-Lag Español: Phonol. V+ Phonol. V- Lead Short-Lag Wheres the long lag (aspirated) stop? No got.

What, if anything, is the relevance of these differences in how the phonetic world is divvied up? In 2 nd language learning its a very big deal. Native English speakers need to: (1) attend to the difference between lead and short-lag (beso-peso) which they have spent years learning to ignore (theyre in free variation in English), and (2) learn to ditch the aspirated stop [pHeso] entirely. Seems like this shouldnt be that hard – English speakers already have all 3 phonetic types; they just need to learn to use them differently.

So, it seems as though the native English speakers task should be fairly straightforward. Is it? Without pretty explicit formal instruction (and sometimes with it) many English speakers never figure it out, even after decades of immersion. It is not uncommon for native English speakers to spend many years living in Spanish-speaking countries without ever: (1) distinguishing lead from short-lag, or (2) abandoning aspirated (long-lag) stops. (Kids figure this stuff out almost immediately, though. Thats another [long, well documented, but poorly understood] story.)

What problem does the Spanish speaker face in learning English? (1)Learn to ignore the now irrelevant lead/short- lag difference (once again, these are allophonic variants in English, not distinct phonemes). (2)Develop the brand-new long-lag sound type. How easy are these things? Not. Many Spanish speakers spend very long periods of time immersed in English-speaking environments without ever abandoning their Spanish voicing system: V+ = lead, V- = short- lag, no aspirated stops.

Cross-language variation in how phonetic categories are divided up does not end there. Below are the 3 phonetic types weve been discussing: lead, short-lag, and long-lag. Thai is one of many languages for which all 3 categories are phonologically (phonemically) contrastive; i.e., Thai has 3 voicing categories, not 2.

How Thai divvies up the phonetic world: Phon. Prevcd Phon. V+ Phon. V- Lead Short-Lag Long-Lag Hindi (& several other Indian languages): Prevcd V+ V- V+ aspirated Lead Short-Lag Long-Lag Lead/Long Lag Just for yucks:

Why am I bothering to tell you all this? This VOT stuff is just one example (part of one e.g. – initial stops only) of the kind of problem faced by: 1.Children learning their native language – they have to learn how to divide up the phonetic world; i.e., figure out what phonetic types are grouped together and which ones are contrastive (phonemically/phonologically distinctive). 2.Adults learning a 2 nd language: its the same problem – what distinctions matter linguistically (phonemically/phonologically) and which ones are allophonic.

Kids solve these problems (with their native tongue and with a new language) gracefully and with astonishing speed. Adults dont fare so well. Why? As a general thing, the more you know about a thing (speech/language in this case) the easier it is to learn new things in that same area. Speech & language dont work this way – hard-won knowledge about L1 gets in the way of learning L2. Once a native English speaker learns to ignore the difference between lead and short-lag stops, its extremely difficult to unlearn it. (This is not unique to language.)

VERY IMPORTANT: I pick the initial stop voicing example because theres a single cue (VOT) that you allows you to see whats going on. Examples are everywhere. One more quick one: English has lots of vowels, partly because English: (a) distinguishes tense and lax vowels (/i-I, e-E, u-U/, and (b) English has vowel reduction (weak vowels -> [«]). Spanish (and other Romance languages – Italian, Portuguese, French, Romanian, …) have many fewer – no tense-lax distinction, no vowel reduction.

VERY IMPORTANT: I pick the initial stop voicing example because theres a single cue (VOT) that you allows you to see whats going on. Examples are everywhere. One more quick one: English has lots of vowels, partly because English: (a) distinguishes tense and lax vowels (/i-I, e-E, u-U/, and (b) English has vowel reduction (weak vowels -> [«]). Spanish (and other Romance languages – Italian, Portuguese, French, Romanian, …) has many fewer vowels – no tense-lax distinctions, no vowel reduction.

Spanish vowels (yellow circles), English (yellow circles plus the un-circled symbols – not shown for English is the all-important schwa). The Spanish speaker learning English has some problems to solve, right? The nature of the problem is simpler than you may be thinking. Lets look at just one English word: Spanish version: [politikal] Native-Eng. Version: [pH«lIR«kH«l]

What explains the (common but not universal) native Spanish speakers pronunciation of this word? Spanish version: [politikal] Native Eng. Version: [pH«lIR«kH«l] (1) Short-lag rather than aspirated stops (2) No vowel reduction (English speaker uses [«]) (3) No lax vowels (English speaker uses [I]) (4) Bonus: Spanish has no flapping rule (didnt discuss this)

In all of these examples, the same thing is going on: The speakers knowledge of their native language is interfering with their ability to learn the new language – its called inter-language interference. Do adults learning a 2 nd language end up solving these problems? There is no single answer to this. Age of learning plays a huge role (though it is not the only factor that matters). The most striking is that many speakers never end up solving many of these clashes between L1 and L2.

Ok, weve looked at the pronunciation of just one English word as it might be pronounced by a native speaker of just one language – Spanish. Further, except for the flap, we examined just two features – initial stop voicing and vowel quality. How much have we learned from this one example? Answer: Plenty. With more time we could have looked at many other examples, but the nature of most of these problems look the same.