Acoustics of the Vowel - Preliminaries
Dublin Core
Title
Acoustics of the Vowel - Preliminaries
Subject
Acoustics
Description
It seems as if the fundamentals of how we produce vowels and how they are acoustically represented have been clarified: we phonate and articulate. Using our vocal chords, we produce a vocal sound or noise which is then shaped into a specific vowel sound by the resonances of the pharyngeal, oral, and nasal cavities, that is, the vocal tract. Accordingly, the acoustic description of vowels relates to vowel-specific patterns of relative energy maxima in the sound spectra, known as patterns of formants. The intellectual and empirical reasoning presented in this treatise, however, gives rise to scepticism with respect to this understanding of the sound of the vowel. The reflections and materials presented provide reason to argue that, up to now, a comprehensible theory of the acoustics of the voice and of voiced speech sounds is lacking, and consequently, no satisfying understanding of vowels as an achievement and particular formal accomplishment of the voice exists. Thus, the question of the acoustics of the vowel—and with it the question of the acoustics of the voice itself—proves to be an unresolved fundamental problem.
Creator
Dieter Maurer,
Source
http://www.oapen.org/search?identifier=588650
Publisher
PETER LANG LTD International Academic Publishers, Bern, Berlin Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford
Contributor
Rika Zulfia
Rights
Creative Commons
Type
Textbooks
Files
Collection
Citation
Dieter Maurer, , “Acoustics of the Vowel - Preliminaries,” Open Educational Resource (OER) - USK Library, accessed April 24, 2025, http://202.4.186.74:8004/oer/items/show/1230.