Abstract

In American English, voiceless codas /t/ and /p/ are often glottalized: They have glottal constriction that results in creaky voice on the preceding vowel. Previous claims suggest that such glottalization can serve to enhance /t/ or, more generally, voicelessness of coda stops. In this study, we examine the timecourse of word recognition to test whether glottalization facilitates the perception of words ending in voiceless /t/ and /p/, which is expected if glottalization is in fact enhancing. Sixty American English listeners participated in an eye-tracking study, where they heard resynthesized glottalized and non-glottalized versions of CVC English words ending in /p, t, b, d/ while looking at a display with two words presented orthographically. Target words were presented with a minimal pair differing in place of articulation (e.g., cop-cot), or voicing, (e.g., bat-bad, cap-cab). Although there is little evidence that glottalization facilitates recognition of words ending in /t/ or /p/, there is a strong inhibitory effect: Words ending in voiced stops are recognized more slowly and poorly when the preceding vowel was glottalized. These findings lend little support to a listener-driven, enhancement-based explanation for the occurrence of coda glottalization in American English. On the other hand, they suggest that glottalized instances of coda /t/ and /p/, but not of coda /d/ and /b/, are perceived as equally good variants of these sounds.

Highlights

  • Coda glottalization is the process by which coda stops are produced either with simultaneous glottal constriction or with glottal constriction that has replaced the oral gesture

  • We focus on instances of coda glottalization where the glottal constriction co-occurs with the oral one, e.g. /bæt/ → [bæʔ͡t]

  • Using a word recognition task with eye-tracking, we examine the timecourse of processing of coda glottalization in American English, to determine whether listeners use voice quality information anticipatorily to perceive voicing and place of articulation contrasts in coda stops

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Summary

Introduction

Coda glottalization is the process by which coda stops are produced either with simultaneous glottal constriction or with glottal constriction that has replaced the oral gesture. In American English (as in many other varieties) the word ‘bat’ /bæt/ may be pronounced without coda glottalization [bæt] (or with another non-glottal variant of /t/, such as [ɾ]), or with coda glottalization [bæʔ͡t, bæʔ]. We focus on instances of coda glottalization where the glottal constriction co-occurs with the oral one, e.g. Using a word recognition task with eye-tracking, we examine the timecourse of processing of coda glottalization in American English, to determine whether listeners use voice quality information anticipatorily to perceive voicing and place of articulation contrasts in coda stops. (In English and other languages, there are additional sources of vocal fold constriction, e.g. phrasal creak, which act on larger prosodic units). Different sources of glottalization exist, including word-initial glottalization (e.g. of words beginning with a stressed vowel: Dilley et al, 1996; Garellek, 2013; Davidson & Erker, 2014), and coda glottalization, which we focus on here

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