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Production of bite-block vowels: Acoustic equivalence by selective compensation
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1981
Year
Articulation (Speech Science)Speech KinematicsElectroglottographySteady State VowelsSpeech ArticulationBite BlockPhonologyArticulation (Literacy Education)Vocal Tract ImagingPhoneticsSpeech Motor ControlLanguage StudiesAcoustic AnalysisHealth SciencesSpeech ProductionLinguisticsMorphologySpeech AcousticSpeech AcousticsSelective CompensationSpeech ProcessingNeuroscienceSpeech PerceptionAuditory SystemComputer Simulation
Acoustic and articulatory data are reported for steady state vowels produced both normally and with a bite block. The formant patterns of the bite-block vowels were found to approximate those of the naturally spoken vowels. Measurements derived from lateral view still x-ray films showed that the bite blocks induce drastic articulatory reorganization. Using a mandibular frame of reference, we found that speakers compensated for a large bite block by using supershapes of the tongue and the lips (for [u] and [o]). Comparing the two productions using a maxillary frame of reference, we noted that compensation was maximum at the points of maximum constriction and incomplete or partial at points where the vocal-tract area was large. A computer simulation of our speakers’ compensatory strategy revealed that they behaved optimally according to acoustic theory. These findings suggest that a vowel target is coded neurophysiologically in terms of acoustically significant area-function information, specifically, by information related to cavity configuration at points of maximum constriction.