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Jan 1999
ISBN 026219404X
615 pp.
700 illus.
BUY THE BOOK
Acoustic Phonetics
Kenneth N. Stevens

"Whenever anybody -- linguist, speech pathologist, or communication engineer -- wants to know why the acoustic structure of a particular sound is as it is, this is the book to which they will turn. There is absolutely no other book with anything like this depth of coverage."
-- Peter Ladefoged, Professor of Phonetics Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles

This long-awaited work presents a theory of speech-sound generation in the human vocal system. The comprehensive acoustic theory serves as one basis for defining categories of speech sounds used to form distinctions between words in languages. The author begins with a review of the anatomy and physiology of speech production, then covers source mechanisms, the vocal tract as an acoustic filter, relevant aspects of auditory psychophysics and physiology, and phonological representations. In the remaining chapters he presents a detailed examination of vowels, consonants, and the influence of context on speech sound production. Although he focuses mainly on the sounds of English, he touches briefly on sounds in other languages.

Table of Contents
 Preface
1 Anatomy and Physiology of Speech Production
2 Source Mechanisms
3 Basic Acoustics of Vocal Tract Resonators
4 Auditory Processing of Speechlike Sounds
5 Phonological Representation of Utterances
6 Vowels: Acoustic Events with a Relatively Open Vocal Tract
7 The Basic Stop Consonants: Bursts and Formant Transitions
8 Obstruent Consonants
9 Sonorant Consonants
10 Some Influences of Context on Speech Sound Production
 Notes
 References
 Index
 
 


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