Abstract
Recent research in speech production indicates that talkers reliably control the relative timing of articulator movement onsets across variation in production rate, syllable stress, and segmental makeup and that this precision of inter-articulator timing control instantiates phonetic structure. To date, these timing relations have been highly reliable for tongue-jaw kinematics. In the present study, we address the generality of these timing relations to lip-jaw kinematics. Eleven talkers recorded 240 /tV#Cat/ and 240 / bV#Cab/ utterances using electromagnetic articulography, with alternative V (/ɑ/-/ɛ/) and C (/t/−/d/ or /p/−/b/), across changes in production rate (fast-normal) and stress (first syllable stressed-unstressed). To quantify inter-articulator temporal coordination, the timing of either tongue-tip or lower-lip raising onset for the intervocalic C, relative to the jaw opening-closing cycle for V, was obtained. Results indicate that the same kinematic pattern occurred among both sets of articulators: any manipulation that shortened the jaw opening-closing cycle reduced the latency of either tongue-tip or lower-lip movement onset, relative to the onset of jaw opening. Furthermore, the movement onset latencies of the tongue-tip and lower-lip were both highly differentiated by utterance type, bolstering the view that inter-articulator timing relations instantiate phonetic structure in the resulting acoustic signal.
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