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Vowel Variation

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lightbulbAbout this topic
Vowel variation refers to the systematic differences in vowel pronunciation that occur within a language or dialect, influenced by factors such as regional accents, social context, and phonetic environment. This phenomenon is studied in linguistics to understand language change, phonology, and sociolinguistic patterns.
lightbulbAbout this topic
Vowel variation refers to the systematic differences in vowel pronunciation that occur within a language or dialect, influenced by factors such as regional accents, social context, and phonetic environment. This phenomenon is studied in linguistics to understand language change, phonology, and sociolinguistic patterns.

Key research themes

1. How do speech style and contextual factors affect vowel variability and dispersion in endangered and spontaneous speech?

This theme investigates the influence of speech styles—elicited versus spontaneous—along with contextual assimilation, speech duration, and speaker sex, on vowel production variability and dispersion. Research is particularly focused on endangered languages and spontaneous speech contexts, where reduced clarity and increased variability present challenges for phonetic documentation and analysis. Understanding these effects is crucial for accurately capturing vowel systems in naturalistic language use and for developing methodologies that allow reliable phonetic analysis despite stylistic variation.

Key finding: This study demonstrated that spontaneous speech in Yoloxóchitl Mixtec exhibited shorter vowel durations, stronger contextual assimilation effects, and greater intra-vowel variability compared to elicited citation speech, with... Read more
Key finding: Analysis of Greek spontaneous monologues revealed extensive acoustic variability across the five-vowel system, with vowel reduction and centralization patterns influenced by vowel duration and consonantal context in... Read more
Key finding: Adults speaking Venezuelan Spanish from Caracas exhibit systematic vowel quality variation conditioned by the presence and realization of syllable-final /s/, including fronting and /a/ raising, which serve as compensatory... Read more

2. What is the nature and extent of within-speaker and between-speaker vowel variability over time and across dialectal varieties?

This research area examines temporal stability and systematic variability of vowel production within individual speakers over hours and days, as well as cross-dialectal and cross-linguistic comparisons of vowel realizations focusing on acoustic dimensions such as formant frequencies and duration. Studying intra- and inter-speaker variability is important for understanding speech motor control, phonetic category stability, and language variation, and has implications for speech technology, phonetic normalization, and intelligibility among different speaker populations.

Key finding: This longitudinal study showed significant systematic within-day changes in vowel F1 and F0 values for seven citation vowels across multiple speakers, suggesting daily factors like fatigue or cognitive state affect vowel... Read more
Key finding: Comparative acoustic analysis of Standard Malay and Kedah Malay vowels from female speakers revealed that although several vowels (/i/, /e/, /ə/, /o/) were similarly produced, others (/a/, /o/) showed significant dialectal... Read more
Key finding: The study found that Nigerian and Malaysian ESL speakers produce English vowels with distinct vowel space distributions, reflecting differences in their native vowel inventories and affecting vowel intelligibility in... Read more
Key finding: Analysis of 86 Canadian English speakers revealed systematic regional differences in the raising of /æ/ before nasals and velar consonants, with Western Canada exhibiting equal raising pre-nasally and pre-velarly, Ontario and... Read more

3. How do vowel duration and spectral features interact with phonological contrasts such as vowel height and quantity across languages?

This theme interrogates the relationship between articulatory and acoustic correlates of vowel features, notably vowel height and phonemic length, exploring whether duration is independently controlled or reflects articulatory constraints like jaw movement. It also addresses how vowel quality and quantity distinctions are acoustically instantiated and the extent to which these phonetic parameters vary systematically or overlap, affecting phonological contrast maintenance. Insights are drawn from diverse languages including English, Norwegian, and Southern British English, highlighting cross-linguistic factors shaping vowel duration and quality.

Key finding: Through analyses of English and Swedish vowels, it was found that duration correlates positively with F1 between vowel categories (lower vowels are longer), supporting phonological control hypotheses for this relationship in... Read more
Key finding: Southern British English data showed that vowel duration differences between stressed and unstressed vowels arise largely from vowel-intrinsic duration characteristics and prosodic context rather than stress itself. Moreover,... Read more
Key finding: Omani speakers of English exhibited vowel length contrasts primarily realized through duration, with vowel quality contrasts being less pronounced. Their English vowel space loosely paralleled British English but reflected... Read more

All papers in Vowel Variation

The study presents an acoustic analysis of Anong vowels, a language on the edge of extinction, investigating how language death affects their range, distribution, and degree of variability. Three processes, raising, nasalization, and... more
Previous research on /-r/ deletion in Andalusian Spanish is very limited. There are some general studies that describe the social and regional distribution of the main characteristics of Andalusian varieties, and they often include some... more
Blas Arroyo, José Luis. "Hasta aquí hemos llega(d)o. ¿Un caso de variación morfológica? Factores estructurales y estilísticos en el español de una comunidad bilingüe."
The paper explores the Spanish of Caracas, Venezuela, a variety with a high rate of /s/ aspiration (Lipski 1994). Data for this study are drawn from thirty-five sociolinguistic interviews from the Caracas Corpus (Bentivoglio 1993). This... more
the Cooperstown speaker’s parents were from the Hudson Valley core as well. (Cooperstown seemingly undergoing new dialect formation; cf. Trudgill et al. 2000) Labov (2007) defines difference between transmission and diffusion of dialect... more
The study presents an acoustic analysis of Anong vowels, a language on the edge of extinction, investigating how language death affects their range, distribution, and degree of variability. Three processes, raising, nasalization, and... more
This paper reflects my experience teaching literary linguistics, or linguistics applied to literary texts, in the context of a department of Spanish and Portuguese. Seven articles in Martin-Estudillo et al. (2006) expressed guarded... more
The purpose of the present study was to examine the influence of lexical stress on formant values (mainly F1 and F2) in spontaneous Hebrew speech. Speech samples taken from a Hebrew version of the wellknown Map Task dialogues were... more
This paper is concerned with a phenomenon of language variation affecting the articulation of vowel sequences in Spanish. Although there are established prescriptive rules, which predict if two adjacent vowels are to be pronounced as a... more
Previous research on /-r/ deletion in Andalusian Spanish is very limited. There are some general studies that describe the social and regional distribution of the main characteristics of Andalusian varieties, and they often include some... more
A short conference proceedings paper presenting data from the Phonetics of Canadian English project on regional variation in the allophonic conditioning of /æ/ before nasals and /g/.
In coda position, the Spanish voiceless sibilant /s/ often undergoes aspiration or deletion in a number a varieties. The present study focuses on factors conditioning /s/ aspiration vs. deletion and thus constitutes an important... more
In this paper, I review previous research on the tendency to resolve hiatus vowel sequences in Spanish, a phenomenon of language variation, especially reported in Latin American varieties. I report on the main factors that motivate and... more
The paper explores the Spanish of Caracas, Venezuela, a variety with a high rate of /s/ aspiration (Lipski 1994). Data for this study are drawn from thirty-five sociolinguistic interviews from the Caracas Corpus (Bentivoglio 1993). This... more
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