Syllable as a synchronization mechanism

Authors

  • Yi Xu Department of Speech, Hearing and Phonetic Sciences, University College London, UK Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2017/08/0003/000305

Keywords:

synchronization, target approximation, edge synchronization

Abstract

Despite being highly intuitive and widely recognized, syllable continues to be a controversial notion. It is argued here that a resolution may lie in recognizing that speech is a highly skilled motor activity with a core problem shared with other motor skills: how to reduce degrees of freedom (DOF) to the extent that makes its central nervous control possible. The most effective way of reducing DOF is to synchronize multiple articulatory movements, and the syllable serves exactly this function for speech. This synchronization hypothesis also offers resolutions to coarticulation and many other unsettled problems, and has implications for motor control in general.

 

References

Browman, C.P., Goldstein, L. 1992. Articulatory phonology. Phonetica 49, 155-180.

MacNeilage, P.F. 1998. The frame/content theory of evolution of speech production. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21, 499–546.

Mechsner, F., Kerzel, D., Knoblich, G., Prinz, W., 2001. Perceptual basis of bimanual coordination. Nature 414: 69-73.

Ladefoged, P. l982. A Course in Phonetics. University of California, Los Angeles.

Ohala, J.J., 1992. Alternatives to the sonority hierarchy for explaining segmental sequential constraints. In Papers from the Parasession on the Syllable. (eds.) Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society: 319-338.

Prom-on, S., Thipakorn, B., Xu, Y. 2009. Modeling tone and intonation in Mandarin and English as a process of target approximation. JASA 125.

Saltzman, E.L., Munhall, K.G. 1989. A dynamical approach to gestural patterning in speech production. Ecological Psychology 1, 333-382.

Downloads

Published

01-01-2017

How to Cite

Syllable as a synchronization mechanism. (2017). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 8(1), 9-12. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2017/08/0003/000305

Share

Similar Articles

1-10 of 46

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.