In this study, local and global prosodic cues for information structure are examined in the elicited production of six Bulgarian sentences. The sentences were produced in response to different questions, devised to prompt different focus realizations (broad focus and non-contrastive and contrastive narrow focus). Results show that speakers consistently differentiate broad and narrow focus by means of both local and global acoustic cues, by producing different pitch accent types on the nuclear syllable and reducing the 'phonetic strength' of the default pre-nuclear accent in the narrow focus condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a production study, Bulgarian, English and German verses with regular poetic metrical metres of different types and elicited prose utterances with varied accentual patterns are produced in textual and iterative (dada) form and measured at syllable level according to the pairwise variability index (PVI) principle. Systematic differences in PVI values show that the measure is sensitive to metrical differences. But variations for utterances with the same metrical structure and comparable measures for accentually different utterances show the measure to be insensitive to the temporal distribution of accents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
January 2006
In this study, the effect of articulation rate and speaking style on the perceived speech rate is investigated. The articulation rate is measured both in terms of the intended phones, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study the voice characteristics of normal male and female speakers are compared to those of two groups of patients with unilateral vocal fold paralysis. In order to enhance phonation, the patients in the first group compensate for the adduction deficiency which results from paralysis. The patients in the second group do not use compensatory strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF