Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Vocal Tract Physiology April 5, 2013 The Toolkit • There are four primary active articulators in speech. • (articulators we can move around ) 1. The lips 2. The lower jaw (mandible) 3. The tongue 4. The velum • The pharynx can also be constricted, to some extent. • Separate sets of muscles control each articulator... Articulatory Speed • The gold medal goes to the tongue tip... • which is capable of 7.2 - 9.6 movements per second. • The rest: • Mandible 5.9 - 8.4 movements per second • Back of tongue 5.4 - 8.9 • Velum 5.2 - 7.8 • Lips 5.7 - 7.7 • Note: lips can be raised and lowered faster than they can be protruded and rounded. 1. The Lips • The orbicularis oris muscle surrounds the lips. • Contraction compresses and rounds the lips. • A muscle called the mentalis also protrudes the lips. • Contraction of the risorius muscle retracts the corners of the lips... • and spreads them. By the way... • The vowel [i] is typically produced with active lip spreading. • “Say cheese!” • What acoustic effect would this have? • Lips Normal: • Lips Spread: • Check ‘em out in Praat. 2. The Jaw • Several different muscles are used to both lower and raise the mandible. • Primary raisers: • Masseter • Temporalis • Internal pterygoid 2. The Jaw • Several different muscles are used to both lower and raise the mandible. • Lowerers: • Anterior belly digastricus • Geniohyoid • Mylohyoid • Note: in lowering, the mandible also retracts. Articulatory Control • People can produce vowels perfectly fine even when a bite block holds their jaws open. (Lindblom, 1979) • Adults get the formants right, right from the start... • But kids need a little time to adjust. • Abbs et al. (1984) experimented with pulling down people’s jaws... • when they had to say sequences like [aba] and [afa]! Abbs et al. EMG data • Lip muscles adjust immediately for the sudden jaw lowering... • Adjustment happens faster than electrical signals can travel to the motor cortex and back! 3. The Tongue • The muscles controlling the tongue consist of: 1. Intrinsic muscles • (completely within the tongue) 2. Extrinsic muscles • • (connect the tongue to outside structures) The intrinsic muscles include: 1. The superior longitudinal muscle 2. The inferior longitudinal muscle 3. Transverse muscles 4. Vertical muscles Tongue: Sagittal View • The superior longitudinal muscle pulls the tongue tip up and back. • Instrumental in producing alveolars and retroflexes. • The inferior longitudinal muscle pulls the tongue tip down and back. • Helps with tongue blade articulations. Tongue: Coronal View • The transverse muscles pulls in the edges of the tongue, and also lengthens the tongue to some extent. • Helpful in producing laterals. • Contraction of the vertical muscles flattens the tongue. • Interdentals? Extrinsic #1: Genioglossus • The genioglossus connects the tongue to both the mandible and the hyoid. • Contraction of the posterior genioglossus moves the whole tongue up and forwards. • Crucial in palatals. • Contraction of the anterior genioglossus curls the tongue tip down and back. Gene-ioglossus Gene Simmons, of the rock band KISS, is famous for his use of the genioglossus muscle. Extrinsic #2: Styloglossus • The styloglossus connects the tongue to the “styloid process” in front of the ear. • Pulls the tongue up and back. • ...for velar articulations. • May also help groove (sulcalize) the tongue. Extrinsic #3: Hyoglossus • The hyoglossus connects the tongue to the hyoid bone. • Pulls the tongue down and back. • = pharyngeals • Can also pull the sides of the tongue down. Extrinsic #4: Palatoglossus • The palatoglossus connects the tongue to the soft palate. • Can be used to raise the back of the tongue. • And also to lower the velum! • Lowering the back of the tongue may inadvertently pull the velum down... • leading to passive nasalization of low vowels. • Note: Great Lakes vowel shift Chain Shifting • The Great Lakes Shift is called a chain shift, because first one vowel moves... • And then a series of others follow. • In this case, the first shift was: • Theory: vowels have to stay distinct from one another. • So listeners can understand what’s being said. Back to the Shift • The Great Lakes Shift was first noticed in the 1960s. The Shift, Diagrammed 4. Velar Muscles • The levator palatini raises the velum. • (connects the velum to the temporal bone) • The velum is lowered by both the palatoglossus and the palatopharyngeus... • which connects the palate to the pharynx.