Purpose: Four measures of children's developing robustness of phonological contrast were compared to see how they correlated with age, vocabulary size, and adult listeners' correctness ratings.
Method: Word-initial sibilant fricative productions from eighty-one 2- to 5-year-old children and 20 adults were phonetically transcribed and acoustically analyzed. Four measures of robustness of contrast were calculated for each speaker on the basis of the centroid frequency measured from each fricative token. Productions that were transcribed as correct from different children were then used as stimuli in a perception experiment in which adult listeners rated the goodness of each production.
Results: Results showed that the degree of category overlap, quantified as the percentage of a child's productions whose category could be correctly predicted from the output of a mixed-effects logistic regression model, was the measure that correlated best with listeners' goodness judgments.
Conclusions: Even when children's productions have been transcribed as correct, adult listeners are sensitive to within-category variation quantified by the child's degree of category overlap. Further research is needed to explore the relationship between the age of a child and adults' sensitivity to different types of within-category variation in children's speech.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2015_JSLHR-S-14-0090 | DOI Listing |
J Prosthet Dent
September 2024
Associate Professor, Adelaide Dental School, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia.
Statement Of Problem: Studies correlating occlusal morphology from 3-dimensional intraoral scans with both soft and hard tissue dynamic landmark tracking within the same participant population are lacking.
Purpose: The purpose of this clinical study was to use 3-dimensional intraoral scanning, computer-aided design, electrognathography, and artificial intelligence to investigate the relationships between anterior occlusion and arch parameters with hard and soft tissue displacements during speech production.
Material And Methods: An artificial intelligence (AI) driven software program and electrognathography was used to record the phonetic activities in 62 participants for soft tissue (ST) and hard tissue (HT) displacement.
Clin Linguist Phon
July 2024
Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
This study explores the influence of lexicality on gradient judgments of Swedish sibilant fricatives by contrasting ratings of initial fricatives in words and word fragments (initial CV-syllables). Visual-Analogue Scale (VAS) judgments were elicited from experienced listeners (speech-language pathologists; SLPs) and inexperienced listeners, and compared with respect to the effects of lexicality using Bayesian mixed-effects beta regression. Overall, SLPs had higher intra- and interrater reliability than inexperienced listeners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Commun Disord
June 2024
Dept. of Experimental Psychology, Cognitive processes and Speech Therapy, Faculty of Psychology, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Purpose: This study examines whether there are differences in the speech of speakers with dysarthria, speakers with apraxia and healthy speakers in spectral acoustic measures during production of the central-peninsular Spanish alveolar sibilant fricative /s/.
Method: To this end, production of the sibilant was analyzed in 20 subjects with dysarthria, 8 with apraxia of speech and 28 healthy speakers. Participants produced 12 sV(C) words.
Open Res Eur
February 2024
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Berlin, 10117, Germany.
Lower Sorbian is a moribund language spoken in Eastern Germany that features a three-way sibilant contrast, /s, ʂ, ɕ/. The vast majority of L1 speakers are above eighty years of age and virtually no young Sorbians learn Lower Sorbian as their first language. There are language revitalization programs in place, but this means that virtually all Lower Sorbian speakers are L2 learners whose first language is German.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Linguist Phon
August 2024
Computer Science Department, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece.
Fricatives, and especially sibilants, are very frequently misarticulated by speakers with hearing loss. Misarticulations can result in phonemic contrast weakening or loss, compromising intelligibility. The present study focuses on the examination of acoustic characteristics of the Greek alveolar fricative /s/, an articulatorily demanding sound, produced by young adult speakers with profound hearing impairment and with normal hearing.
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