DocumentCode
312279
Title
An acoustic study of the interaction between stressed and unstressed syllables in spoken Mandarin
Author
Wang, Jing
Author_Institution
Speech, Hearing & Language Res. Centre, Macquarie Univ., Sydney, NSW, Australia
Volume
3
fYear
1996
fDate
3-6 Oct 1996
Firstpage
1616
Abstract
The study examines the acoustic correlates of relative prominence in connected Mandarin speech, particularly those acoustic manifestations that reveal an interaction between stressed and unstressed syllables. The acoustic measurements are primarily concerned with segment duration, intensity, and F0. The study shows that: (1) stressed CV syllables have significantly longer consonant and vowel durations and greater intensity when preceding unstressed syllables than stressed syllables; (2) vowel intensity and duration of stressed syllables are significantly affected by the stressed status of preceding and succeeding syllables, and anticipatory effects are greater on vowel duration but carryover ones are greater on vowel intensity; (3) apart from their lexical stress status, the relative prominence of consecutive syllables is mainly determined by interaction-i.e., unstressed syllables render neighboring syllables more prominent, while stressed syllables cause neighboring syllables to become weak, engendering a pattern of alternating strong and weak syllables. The study also provides insights into the metrical structure of Mandarin and how stress functions in Mandarin speech, where stress and accent interact with lexical tones
Keywords
natural languages; speech processing; F0 parameter; acoustic correlates; acoustic measurements; acoustic study; alternating strong/weak syllables; anticipatory effects; carryover effects; connected Mandarin speech; consecutive syllables; consonant duration; lexical stress status; metrical structure; preceding syllables; relative prominence; segment duration; segment intensity; spoken Mandarin; stressed CV syllables; stressed/stressed syllable interaction; succeeding syllables; vowel duration; vowel intensity; Acoustic measurements; Auditory system; Chaos; Natural languages; Rhythm; Speech; Stress measurement;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Spoken Language, 1996. ICSLP 96. Proceedings., Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3555-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSLP.1996.607933
Filename
607933
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