Lecture 2 Flashcards
What are the motor speech subsystems?
-Respiratory – provides air supply for sound production
-Laryngeal – generates voiced sounds necessary for vowels and some consonants
-Velopharyngeal – separates oral from nasal cavity, when is it closed?
-Tongue – primary articulator of the oral cavity
Tip/apex; blade; back/dorsum, root, body
-Lips- articulator of the oral cavity
-Nervous System
Are vowels produced with a restricted or relatively open vocal tract?
Open
What is the major articulator for vowels?
Tongue
What are tense vowels?
One that can be prolonged in duration, tension in tongue
What are lax vowels?
Shorter in duration, less tension in tongue
What’s the difference between vowels that are monothongs or diphthongs?
Monothongs are steady vowels, no movement of the tongue. Diphthongs have movement of the tongue so they are dynamic.
Diphthong articulation?
Produced with an open vocal tract
Articulation gradually changes
Dynamic in nature
How does someone acquire a new sound?
Need to make a connection between what they hear to how they need to move their articulators
Sonorant?
Voicing with little vocal constriction (vowels, nasals, glides, liquids)
Interrupted?
Complete obstruction of the airway (stop and affricate consonants)
Strident?
Fricatives and affricates produced with intense noise
Coronal?
Tongue height above the neutral position
Distributed?
Construction occurs throughout the vocal tract
Aerodynamics & Vocal Tract Configurations
Series of interconnected tubes and valves
Critical for speech and swallowing
Constriction in larynx= voiced
No constriction in larynx= voiceless
Four Level Model of Speech Motor Control (Van Der Merwe, 2021)
- During linguistic symbolic planning, phonemes are selected and sequenced.
- During motor planning, phonemes are assigned properties akin to a core motor plan (CMP).
- During motor programming, tactics or specifications regarding muscle tone, movement direction, velocity, force, range are added to the CMPs.
- During execution, speech movement occurs.