Abstract

This paper investigates the relationship between vowel production and age using speech data from 109 Chinese L1 speakers (61 females and 48 males) covering an age range of 20 to 80 years. Acoustical estimation of vocal tract length (VTL) as well as multiple acoustic metrics are analyzed with generalized additive mixed models (GAMM). The results indicate that: (1) After controlling for VTL, F0 and duration, vowels show a centralization trend with increasing age, with a more significant effect observed in female speakers; (2) VTL does not significantly change with age; (3) The patterns observed in vowel distinctiveness and duration may present evidence contradicting the notion of vowel lengthening as a compensatory mechanism; (4) The patterns of age-related changes in different measurements and different genders are diverse. The U-shaped change patterns are found in the male speakers and the age around 50 may serve as a turning point. Based on these findings, we have explored some possible reasons for inconsistent conclusions in previous studies. The physiological aging phenomena of vowel production and potential compensatory mechanisms on motor control abilities, as well as other possible influencing factors, are also discussed.

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