Speech Rate Effects on VOT in a 3-category Language: Evidence from Hakha Chin
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2019-07-13
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This study probes the claim made under Laryngeal Realism (e.g., Beckman et al., 2011/2013), by investigating the effect of speech rate on VOT in Hakha Chin. The present study uses the diagnostics of changing the speech rate (Beckman et al., 2011) and examines whether it can be used to find the specified phonological features of a language with a three-way contrast, Hakha Chin. Laryngeal Realism states that the phonological features are privative and that the aspirating language is specified with the feature [spread glottis], while the true voiced language is specified with the feature of [voice]. It has been widely known that the speech rate affects laryngeal stops asymmetrically, and LR authors argue this is because the phonological features are privative rather than binary (e.g. Kessinger & Blumstein, 1997). Methodologically, it attempts to experimentally control the rate variation with the help of a metronome (de Jong, 2001). The present study observes that in Hakha Chin, at a slower rate, the VOT of the prevoiced stop and the aspirated stop increase, while that of the voiceless unaspirated does not, which supports the claims of the LR, but with caveats due to speaker variations.
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Lee, Seung Suk, and Berkson, Kelly Harper. "Speech Rate Effects on VOT in a 3-category Language: Evidence from Hakha Chin." Indiana Working Papers in South Asian Languages and Cultures, vol. 1, no. 1, 2019-07-13, https://doi.org/10.14434/iwpsalc2019.v1i1.27453.
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Indiana Working Papers in South Asian Languages and Cultures