LINA01H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Acoustic Phonetics, Articulatory Phonetics, Auditory Phonetics

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23 Aug 2012
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Phonetics phone (sound in greek) +-etic (having property of sound) Having he property of sound major areas of phonetics: articulatory phonetics, acoustic phonetics: deals with the physics of speech (eg. how air moves, auditory phonetics: Graphical representation of the waveform of the word ban . There are certain cultures where they have rich language where nothing is written down and so no reading is involved, but language exists just a representation. We hear things that are not really there: We don"t isolate each of the sounds of a words; it goes in a flow: eg. for ban we don"t hear it ba-ah-nn but rather as ban , really hard to segment things, == overlap co-articulation. While mouth is closed for b, tongue is already is in place for the a sound. Acoustic waveform for same word for different people is completely different, yet we still hear it as the same word (eg. on slide, the two graphs are for ban)

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