Abstract

Talkers dynamically modify their coarticulatory patterns when producing listener-oriented hyperarticulated clear speeches. This study examined how the use of protective face masks interacts with the production of intelligibility-enhancing clear speech to impact coarticulation. A native and a non-native speaker of English read sentences in a clear and conversational speaking style with and without a surgical mask. Coarticulation between word-internal adjacent segments was analyzed with a whole-spectrum analysis including spectral distance and segment overlap duration. Both speakers coarticulated less in clear than in conversational speaking style as indicated by the larger spectral distance and shorter overlap duration between adjacent segments. Coarticulation was further reduced when clear speech was produced with a mask by the native speaker but not by the non-native speaker. The findings showed that producing hyperarticulated intelligibility-enhancing clear speech also involves reducing coarticulatory overlap across adjacent segments. Coarticulatory resistance was adaptively reinforced in the presence of the additional communicative barrier, face mask, particularly for the speaker with extensive experience with the target language. Such cumulative reduction of coarticulation may in part underlie the larger perception-in-noise benefit for clear speech produced with a mask for the native compared to the non-native talker.

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