JOURNAL ARTICLE

Place assimilation is not the result of gestural overlap: evidence from Korean and English

Jongho Jun

Year: 1996 Journal:   Phonology Vol: 13 (3)Pages: 377-407   Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Abstract

In the theory of articulatory phonology Browman & Goldstein (1986, 1990, 1992) claim that place assimilation is mainly the result of the overlap of gestures and the perception of these overlapping gestures as a single gesture. Ohala (1990) makes a similar claim. The present study provides interesting experimental evidence against this explanation of assimilation as a result of gestural overlap and resulting misperception, and for the importance of gestural reduction.

Keywords:
Gesture Assimilation (phonology) Phonology Linguistics Perception Psychology Cognitive psychology Communication Philosophy Neuroscience

Metrics

63
Cited By
1.51
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
18
Refs
0.80
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Phonetics and Phonology Research
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Linguistic Variation and Morphology
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Linguistics and Language
Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic Variation
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Language and Linguistics
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