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Language & Cognition
WK3 L5: Phonemes Part 1
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Cards (56)
What does the
acoustic signal
of speech sound represent?
Vibrations of air
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How can sounds be characterized according to their movements?
As rapid vibrations shown in an
oscillogram
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What does the
y-axis
of an
oscillogram
represent?
The magnitude of movements
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What does the
x-axis
of an
oscillogram
represent?
Time
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What is the relationship between
movement size
and
sound loudness
?
Larger
movements are louder
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How does
frequency
relate to
pitch
in sound?
Higher frequency movements sound higher in pitch
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What shape does a pure tone sound have?
A
sine wave
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What is a
tuning fork
designed to produce?
A sound like a
pure tone
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What does a
pure tone
contain?
Only a single
frequency
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How is the
frequency
of a pure tone expressed?
By how often the
sine
pattern repeats
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What is the
frequency
of a sound that repeats
400
times per second?
400
Hz
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How do most speech sounds differ from
pure tones
?
They are more complicated and do not look like a
sine wave
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What can
complex
sounds be re-described as?
Several simple vibrations (
sine waves
) of
different
frequencies added together
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What is
Fourier Analysis
used for?
To pick out
sine waves
that add up to the waveform being analyzed
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What does a
spectrogram
represent?
Sound in which
frequency
is the
y-axis
and time is the
x-axis
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What is the lowest frequency in a sound called?
Fundamental frequency
(
F0
)
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How is the
pitch
we
perceive
in a sound linked?
It is linked to the
fundamental frequency
(
F0
)
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What is
tone
in some languages related to?
The level of
F0
or the way F0 changes over time
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Does English use
F0 tone
?
No, English does not use F0 tone
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What can
spectrograms
show when computed from real data?
How
frequencies
change over time and their strength
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Why is real data considered noisy in spectrograms?
Because it contains various
unwanted
sounds
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What is required to read
spectrograms
effectively?
Expert
training
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What are the two major
categories
of speech sounds?
Vowels: produced with
unobstructed
airflow
Consonants: produced with obstructed airflow
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How are
consonants
produced?
By obstructing airflow in the
vocal tract
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Why are there more possible
consonants
than
vowels
?
Because consonants can be produced in various ways
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What are
pulmonic consonants
?
Consonants produced by obstructing
airflow
pushed out of the lungs
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Do all languages use
pulmonic consonants
?
Yes
, all languages use pulmonic consonants
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What are
non-pulmonic
consonants?
Consonants that involve other means of making the air move
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What are the three ways to define
consonants
?
By
place of articulation
,
manner of articulation
, and
voicing
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What is
place of articulation
?
The location where the
narrowing
or obstruction occurs
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What are examples of places of articulation?
Bilabial
,
dental
,
velar
,
glottal
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What does
manner of articulation
refer to?
The different types of
narrowing
or obstruction of the
vocal tract
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What are
plosives
?
When the
vocal tract
is entirely closed, stopping airflow
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What are
fricatives
?
Sounds produced from a slight gap that creates
vibration
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What are
approximants
?
Sounds with only a slight obstruction producing slight
turbulence
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What does
voicing
refer to?
The vibration of the
vocal cords
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Can
consonants
be produced without
voicing
?
Yes, consonants can be voiced or
voiceless
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What is
Voice Onset Time
(
VOT
)?
The time it takes for voicing to begin after a consonant is produced
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What is the
VOT
for
voiced
/d/ and
voiceless
/t/ in English?
There are clear differences in VOT between them
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What are
vowels
primarily defined by?
Vowel height
,
vowel backness
, and
roundness
of the lips
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