Abstract

Recent research has shown evidence based on a minimal contrast paradigm that consonants and vowels are articulatorily synchronized at the onset of the syllable. What remains less clear is the laryngeal dimension of the syllable, for which evidence of tone synchrony with the consonant-vowel syllable has been circumstantial. The present study assesses the precise tone-vowel alignment in Mandarin Chinese by applying the minimal contrast paradigm. The vowel onset is determined by detecting divergence points of F2 trajectories between a pair of disyllabic sequences with two contrasting vowels, and the onsets of tones are determined by detecting divergence points of f0 trajectories in contrasting disyllabic tone pairs, using generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs). The alignment of the divergence-determined vowel and tone onsets is then evaluated with linear mixed effect models (LMEMs) and their synchrony is validated with Bayes factors. The results indicate that tone and vowel onsets are fully synchronized. There is therefore evidence for strict alignment of consonant, vowel and tone as hypothesized in the synchronization model of the syllable. Also, with the newly established tone onset, the previously reported ‘anticipatory raising’ effect of tone now appears to occur within rather than before the articulatory syllable. Implications of these findings will be discussed.

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