TY - JOUR A1 - Tobin, Stephen J. A1 - Nam, Hosung A1 - Fowler, Carol A. T1 - Phonetic drift in Spanish-English bilinguals: Experiment and a self-organizing model JF - Journal of phonetics N2 - Studies of speech accommodation provide evidence for change in use of language structures beyond the critical/sensitive period. For example, Sancier and Fowler (1997) found changes in the voice-onset-times (VOTs) of both languages of a Portuguese-English bilingual as a function of her language context. Though accommodation has been studied widely within a monolingual context, it has received less attention in and between the languages of bilinguals. We tested whether these findings of phonetic accommodation, speech accommodation at the phonetic level, would generalize to a sample of Spanish-English bilinguals. We recorded participants reading Spanish and English sentences after 3–4 months in the US and after 2–4 weeks in a Spanish speaking country and measured the VOTs of their voiceless plosives. Our statistical analyses show that participants’ English VOTs drifted towards those of the ambient language, but their Spanish VOTs did not. We found considerable variation in the extent of individual participants’ drift in English. Further analysis of our results suggested that native-likeness of L2 VOTs and extent of active language use predict the extent of drift. We provide a model based on principles of self-organizing dynamical systems to account for our Spanish-English phonetic drift findings and the Portuguese-English findings. KW - Speech accommodation KW - Gestural drift KW - Phonetic drift KW - Bilingualism KW - Self-organization KW - Dynamical systems KW - Computational model Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2017.05.006 SN - 0095-4470 VL - 65 SP - 45 EP - 59 PB - Elsevier CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Toy, Virginia Gail A1 - Sutherland, Rupert A1 - Townend, John A1 - Allen, Michael J. A1 - Becroft, Leeza A1 - Boles, Austin A1 - Boulton, Carolyn A1 - Carpenter, Brett A1 - Cooper, Alan A1 - Cox, Simon C. A1 - Daube, Christopher A1 - Faulkner, D. R. A1 - Halfpenny, Angela A1 - Kato, Naoki A1 - Keys, Stephen A1 - Kirilova, Martina A1 - Kometani, Yusuke A1 - Little, Timothy A1 - Mariani, Elisabetta A1 - Melosh, Benjamin A1 - Menzies, Catriona D. A1 - Morales, Luiz A1 - Morgan, Chance A1 - Mori, Hiroshi A1 - Niemeijer, Andre A1 - Norris, Richard A1 - Prior, David A1 - Sauer, Katrina A1 - Schleicher, Anja Maria A1 - Shigematsu, Norio A1 - Teagle, Damon A. H. A1 - Tobin, Harold A1 - Valdez, Robert A1 - Williams, Jack A1 - Yeo, Samantha A1 - Baratin, Laura-May A1 - Barth, Nicolas A1 - Benson, Adrian A1 - Boese, Carolin A1 - Célérier, Bernard A1 - Chamberlain, Calum J. A1 - Conze, Ronald A1 - Coussens, Jamie A1 - Craw, Lisa A1 - Doan, Mai-Linh A1 - Eccles, Jennifer A1 - Grieve, Jason A1 - Grochowski, Julia A1 - Gulley, Anton A1 - Howarth, Jamie A1 - Jacobs, Katrina A1 - Janku-Capova, Lucie A1 - Jeppson, Tamara A1 - Langridge, Robert A1 - Mallyon, Deirdre A1 - Marx, Ray A1 - Massiot, Cécile A1 - Mathewson, Loren A1 - Moore, Josephine A1 - Nishikawa, Osamu A1 - Pooley, Brent A1 - Pyne, Alex A1 - Savage, Martha K. A1 - Schmitt, Doug A1 - Taylor-Offord, Sam A1 - Upton, Phaedra A1 - Weaver, Konrad C. A1 - Wiersberg, Thomas A1 - Zimmer, Martin T1 - Bedrock geology of DFDP-2B, central Alpine Fault, New Zealand JF - New Zealand journal of geology and geophysics : an international journal of the geoscience of New Zealand, the Pacific Rim, and Antarctica ; NZJG N2 - During the second phase of the Alpine Fault, Deep Fault Drilling Project (DFDP) in the Whataroa River, South Westland, New Zealand, bedrock was encountered in the DFDP-2B borehole from 238.5–893.2 m Measured Depth (MD). Continuous sampling and meso- to microscale characterisation of whole rock cuttings established that, in sequence, the borehole sampled amphibolite facies, Torlesse Composite Terrane-derived schists, protomylonites and mylonites, terminating 200–400 m above an Alpine Fault Principal Slip Zone (PSZ) with a maximum dip of 62°. The most diagnostic structural features of increasing PSZ proximity were the occurrence of shear bands and reduction in mean quartz grain sizes. A change in composition to greater mica:quartz + feldspar, most markedly below c. 700 m MD, is inferred to result from either heterogeneous sampling or a change in lithology related to alteration. Major oxide variations suggest the fault-proximal Alpine Fault alteration zone, as previously defined in DFDP-1 core, was not sampled. KW - Alpine Fault KW - New Zealand KW - scientific drilling KW - mylonite KW - cataclasite Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/00288306.2017.1375533 SN - 0028-8306 SN - 1175-8791 VL - 60 IS - 4 SP - 497 EP - 518 PB - Taylor & Francis CY - Abingdon ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gibson, Mark A1 - Sotiropoulou, Stavroula A1 - Tobin, Stephen A1 - Gafos, Adamantios I. T1 - Temporal Aspects of Word Initial Single Consonants and Consonants in Clusters in Spanish JF - Phonetic N2 - We examined gestural coordination in C1C2 (C1 stop, C2 lateral or tap) word initial clusters using articulatory (electromagnetic articulometry) and acoustic data from six speakers of Standard Peninsular Spanish. We report on patterns of voice onset time (VOT), gestural plateau duration of C1, C2, and their overlap. For VOT, as expected, place of articulation is a major factor, with velars exhibiting longer VOTs than labials. Regarding C1 plateau duration, voice and place effects were found such that voiced consonants are significantly shorter than voiceless consonants, and velars show longer duration than labials. For C2 plateau duration, lateral duration was found to vary as a function of onset complexity (C vs. CC). As for overlap, unlike in French, where articulatory data for clusters have also been examined, clusters where both C1 and C2 are voiced show more overlap than where voicing differs. Further, overlap was affected by the C2 such that clusters where C2 is a tap show less overlap than clusters where C2 is a lateral. We discuss these results in the context of work aiming to uncover phonetic (e.g., articulatory or perceptual) and phonological forces (e.g., syllabic organization) on timing. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1159/000501508 SN - 0031-8388 SN - 1423-0321 VL - 76 IS - 6 SP - 448 EP - 478 PB - Karger CY - Basel ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tobin, Stephen A1 - Hullebus, Marc Antony A1 - Gafos, Adamantios I. T1 - Immediate phonetic convergence in a cue-distractor paradigm JF - The journal of the Acoustical Society of America N2 - During a cue-distractor task, participants repeatedly produce syllables prompted by visual cues. Distractor syllables are presented to participants via headphones 150 ms after the visual cue (before any response). The task has been used to demonstrate perceptuomotor integration effects (perception effects on production): response times (RTs) speed up as the distractor shares more phonetic properties with the response. Here it is demonstrated that perceptuomotor integration is not limited to RTs. Voice Onset Times (VOTs) of the distractor syllables were systematically varied and their impact on responses was measured. Results demonstrate trial-specific convergence of response syllables to VOT values of distractor syllables. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1121/1.5082984 SN - 0001-4966 SN - 1520-8524 VL - 144 IS - 6 SP - EL528 EP - EL534 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hullebus, Marc Antony A1 - Tobin, Stephen J. A1 - Gafos, Adamantios I. T1 - Speaker-specific structure in German voiceless stop voice onset times T2 - 19th Annual confernce of the international speech communication association (INTERSPEECH 2018), VOLS 1-6: speech research for emerging markets in multilingual societies N2 - Voice onset time (VOT), a primary cue for voicing in many languages including English and German, is known to vary greatly between speakers, but also displays robust within-speaker consistencies, at least in English. The current analysis extends these findings to German. VOT measures were investigated from voiceless alveolar and velar stops in CV syllables cued by a visual prompt in a cue-distractor task. Comparably to English, a considerable portion of German VOT variability can be attributed to the syllable’s vowel length and the stop’s place of articulation. Individual differences in VOT still remain irrespective of speech rate. However, significant correlations across places of articulation and between speaker-specific mean VOTs and standard deviations indicate that talkers employ a relatively unified VOT profile across places of articulation. This could allow listeners to more efficiently adapt to speaker-specific realisations. KW - speech production KW - speech variability KW - voice onset time Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5108-7221-9 U6 - https://doi.org/10.21437/Interspeech.2018-2288 SN - 2308-457X SP - 1403 EP - 1407 PB - ISCA-International Speech Communication Association CY - Baixas ER -