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Acoustic differences in morphologically-distinct homophones

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posted on 2017-08-20, 16:53 authored by Scott Seyfarth, Marc Garellek, Gwendolyn Gillingham, Farrell Ackerman, Robert Malouf

Previous work demonstrates that a word's status as morphologically-simple or complex may be reflected in its phonetic realisation. One possible source for these effects is phonetic paradigm uniformity, in which an intended word's phonetic realisation is influenced by its morphological relatives. For example, the realisation of the inflected word frees should be influenced by the phonological plan for free, and thus be non-homophonous with the morphologically-simple word freeze. We test this prediction by analysing productions of forty such inflected/simple word pairs, embedded in pseudo-conversational speech structured to avoid metalinguistic task effects, and balanced for frequency, orthography, as well as segmental and prosodic context. We find that stem and suffix durations are significantly longer by about 4–7% in fricative-final inflected words (frees, laps) compared to their simple counterparts (freeze, lapse), while we find a null effect for stop-final words. The result suggests that wordforms influence production of their relatives.

Funding

This research was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (Division of Graduate Education) to the first author under [grant number DGE-1144086]. Any opinion, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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