发音语音

M. Pouplier
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引用次数: 1

摘要

口语研究中最基本的问题之一是理解说话者以语音语法形式拥有的分类的、系统的知识如何映射到传递语言信息的连续的、高维的物理言语行为上。音素分析的不变单位在信号中没有不变的类似物——任何给定的音素都可以表现为许多可能的变体,这取决于上下文、语速、话语位置等,并且给定音素的声学线索随着时间的推移在多个语言单位中传播。说话者和听者对信号中合理结构的变化非常了解,他们在说话和感知时巧妙地利用发音和声音的交换关系。对于口语的科学描述,理解抽象的、离散的类别和连续的语音动态之间的联系仍然是一个巨大的挑战。发音音韵学和相关的任务动态模型提出了一个特别的建议,关于如何利用动力系统的数学来应对这一挑战,其核心观点是口语从根本上是基于语言定义的运动模式的产生和感知。在发音音系学中,音系表征的原始单位称为手势。手势是基于线性二阶微分方程定义的,赋予它们固有的空间和时间规范。手势在宏观层面上控制声道,将声道中的许多自由度转化为低维控制单元。因此,在这个模型中,音系直接支配声道动作的空间和时间编排。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Articulatory Phonology
One of the most fundamental problems in research on spoken language is to understand how the categorical, systemic knowledge that speakers have in the form of a phonological grammar maps onto the continuous, high-dimensional physical speech act that transmits the linguistic message. The invariant units of phonological analysis have no invariant analogue in the signal—any given phoneme can manifest itself in many possible variants, depending on context, speech rate, utterance position and the like, and the acoustic cues for a given phoneme are spread out over time across multiple linguistic units. Speakers and listeners are highly knowledgeable about the lawfully structured variation in the signal and they skillfully exploit articulatory and acoustic trading relations when speaking and perceiving. For the scientific description of spoken language understanding this association between abstract, discrete categories and continuous speech dynamics remains a formidable challenge. Articulatory Phonology and the associated Task Dynamic model present one particular proposal on how to step up to this challenge using the mathematics of dynamical systems with the central insight being that spoken language is fundamentally based on the production and perception of linguistically defined patterns of motion. In Articulatory Phonology, primitive units of phonological representation are called gestures. Gestures are defined based on linear second order differential equations, giving them inherent spatial and temporal specifications. Gestures control the vocal tract at a macroscopic level, harnessing the many degrees of freedom in the vocal tract into low-dimensional control units. Phonology, in this model, thus directly governs the spatial and temporal orchestration of vocal tract actions.
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