LINGUIST List 15.1220

Fri Apr 16 2004

Diss: Phonetics: Herrick: 'An acoustic...'

Editor for this issue: Takako Matsui <takolinguistlist.org>


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  • dylan, An acoustic analysis of phonological vowel reduction...

    Message 1: An acoustic analysis of phonological vowel reduction...

    Date: Fri, 16 Apr 2004 06:27:36 -0400 (EDT)
    From: dylan <dylanhuman.mie-u.ac.jp>
    Subject: An acoustic analysis of phonological vowel reduction...


    Institution: University of California, Santa Cruz Program: Department of Linguistics Dissertation Status: Completed Degree Date: 2003

    Author: Dylan Herrick

    Dissertation Title: An acoustic analysis of phonological vowel reduction in six varieties of Catalan

    Dissertation URL: http://ling.ucsc.edu/research/SLUGPubs/

    Linguistic Field: Phonetics, Phonology

    Subject Language: Catalan-valencian-balear (code: CLN)

    Dissertation Director 1: Jaye Padgett Dissertation Director 2: Junko Ito Dissertation Director 3: Armin Mester Dissertation Director 4: Pilar Prieto

    Dissertation Abstract:

    The empirical focus of this dissertation is a quantitative acoustic study of six regional varieties of Catalan - a Romance language spoken primarily in northeastern Spain. Chapter One provides a brief historical background on Catalan as well as a description of the patterns of vowel reduction found in each of the six regional varieties; Bages (Eastern: Central Catalan), Girona (Eastern: Central Catalan), Palma (Eastern: Balearic Catalan), Lloseta (Eastern: Balearic Catalan), Ciutadella (Eastern: Balearic Catalan), and Lleida (Western: North-western Catalan). The remaining chapters provide more detail on the theoretical background (Chapter Two), the experimental methodology (Chapter Three), the acoustic data (Chapter Four), and a discussion of some of the theoretical implications of the data (Chapter Five). Appendix IV presents the F1-F3 data for each of the 2640 vowel tokens measured.

    The principal findings of this dissertation are that i) the acoustic data (largely) support the impressionistic descriptions of the six varieties studied, ii) the primary characteristic of Catalan vowel reduction is raising (not centralization) and therefore supports the phonetic explanation to vowel raising given in Crosswhite (1999, to appear), Flemming (1995, to appear), and Barnes (2002), iii) the F1 raising attested in the data matches the predicted amount of raising (and never exceeds this amount) for all six varieties, iv) vowels are not evenly spaced throughout the vowel space, and v) the attested minimal distance between neighboring vowels is always smaller than the theoretically predicted minimal distance.