The experimenter will need to consider reasonable and realistic ranges of VOT when planning stimulus creation. The spectrograms reveal that the spectral properties (formant transitions) in each syllable are most naturally aligned at the consonant release rather than at the onset of voicing. Figure 1 illustrates this pattern in a clear way by aligning consonant release bursts in syllables with onset voiced-voiceless counterparts (/ɡɑ/ and /kɑ/). This progressive cutback technique recognizes that the aperiodic segment in voiceless stops (such as English /p t k/) is not added (preappended) to the onset of the vowel, but instead is a devoicing of the vowel onset. The current paper describes a “progressive cutback and replacement” approach whereby the onset of a word with a voiced stop sound is progressively deleted and replaced with a roughly equivalent amount of the onset from its voiceless-onset counterpart. There are also other stop sounds that are not native to North American English such as implosive and ejective stops (or, more generally, non-pulmonic stops), where the acoustics are more complex than what will be presented here.Ĭonspicuously missing from the acoustic phonetics literature is a dedicated tutorial on how to properly and efficiently construct stimuli that vary by VOT and other dimensions related to VOT. In English, sounds in either the short-lag or prevoicing categories would typically be heard as “voiced.” These same phonetic signatures also apply to affricates, where delayed voicing and aspiration would correspond to phonologically voiceless affricates, while short-lag or prevoicing would correspond to voiced affricates. Alternatively, periodicity could begin before the burst pre-burst periodicity is described as negative VOT and is usually called “pre-voicing.” Prevoiced stops are not used by all speakers of North American English, but they are common in some dialects and in many other languages of the world. VOT can be very short, where the consonant release burst is roughly simultaneous with the onset of phonetic voicing/periodicity such consonants are described as “voiceless unaspirated” or “short-lag VOT” sounds. In English long-lag or aspirated stops are typically called “voiceless” stops for simplicity. During the interval between the consonant release burst and the onset of the following vowel, there is aperiodic noise stemming from the burst itself, and perhaps aspiration as well, particularly in the case of long-lag VOT (greater than ≈30 ms). Phonological voicing is more complex it is an abstract categorical dimension that usually is accompanied by phonetic voicing, but not necessarily so in all languages and dialects (e.g., there are other articulatory gestures and acoustic properties that can signify phonological voicing). Phonetic voicing refers to vocal fold vibration, which gives rise to periodicity in the waveform. There is value in becoming familiar with the commonly used terms surrounding VOT and its accompanying properties in the domains of acoustics and articulation.
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