The acoustic correlates of stress and tone in Chácobo (Pano): A production study.


Journal

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
ISSN: 1520-8524
Titre abrégé: J Acoust Soc Am
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7503051

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 2020
Historique:
entrez: 4 5 2020
pubmed: 4 5 2020
medline: 22 6 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

This paper investigates the acoustic correlates of word initial prominence and tone in Chácobo, a southern Pano language of the northern Bolivian Amazon. This paper reports the results of a production study with five speakers producing trisyllabic words with a word final high tone. It tests a claim found in the literature that there is an additional word-initial prominence in such forms and determines its acoustic correlates compared with high tone. This study used trisyllabic forms in morphophonological contexts where these forms would appear with a final high tone. In such forms, high tone and word-initial prominence do not overlap (e.g., "panaß̞í" "asaí"). The paper takes into account five acoustic correlates across the three syllables of these words: F1, F2, F0, duration, intensity. The paper finds that the initial syllable in these words shows a statistically significant increase in intensity. There is significant speaker variation with respect to whether duration is a correlation of initial stress and the results do not provide clear evidence that initial stress is marked with duration. The final high-tone marked syllables are distinguished based on an increase in F0 and secondarily with vowel duration. Whether pitch is also a correlate of stress requires future research. The paper interprets these results as suggesting that Chácobo is a language in which tone and stress co-exist. The study thus provides instrumental evidence for a phenomenon suggested to occur in some Pano languages. The limitations of this study, including the fact the results have more than one interpretation in light of current discussions concerning stress and tone, are also discussed.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32359331
doi: 10.1121/10.0001014
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

3028

Auteurs

Adam J R Tallman (AJR)

Université de Lyon II, Lyon, France.

José Elías-Ulloa (J)

Stony Brook, New York 11794, USA.

Articles similaires

Humans Male Female Mental Health Child, Preschool
Sound Neural Networks, Computer Acoustics Algorithms Humans

Acoustic cognitive map-based navigation in echolocating bats.

Aya Goldshtein, Xing Chen, Eran Amichai et al.
1.00
Animals Chiroptera Echolocation Spatial Navigation Homing Behavior

Classifications MeSH