Donna Erickson
Showa Music
University, Kawasaki City, Japan
An Articulatory
Account of Rhythm, Prominence and Phrasal Articulation
This paper examines
some articulatory and acoustic characteristics of
American English. The results suggest that the jaw may be the articulatory organizer of phrasal rhythm, manifested
acoustically through the F2-F1 pattern. Utterance prominence, such as contrastive
emphasis, is additionally manifested by increased F0 along with increased
duration on the prominent word. The rhythmical organization of the utterance,
based on strong-weak jaw opening patterns, may be different from the
intonational organization involving pitch accents/ boundary strengths. American
English prosody might be best described using a parallel system involving both
a rhythm system based on articulation, and an intonational system involving
pitch notations.