Pilar Prieto | ICREA & Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
According to Sluijter and colleagues (1996b, 1997), stress is independent from accent because it has its own phonetic cues: stressed vowels are longer and have flatter spectral tilts than their unstressed counterparts. However, Campbell and Beckman (1997) show that, for American English, these duration and spectral tilt patterns are a consequence of vowel reduction: when unreduced vowels with different levels of stress (primary and secondary stress) are compared, duration and spectral tilt do not correlate with the stress difference. This paper contributes to the above discussion by examining the stress contrast in deaccented syllables in Spanish. Since Spanish has no phonological vowel reduction, it constitutes a good test case for the above hypotheses. Moreover, this study attempts to disentangle the correlates of stress from those of accent, something which has thus far not been done in the traditional literature on Spanish stress. The results indicate that stress contrast in Spanish is maintained in deaccented contexts by differences in duration, spectral tilt, and to a lesser extent, vowel quality.
2018. Patterns of prominence, phrasing and tonal events in Spanish news reading: An illustrative case study. Loquens 5:1 ► pp. 048 ff.
Behrman, Alison, Sarah Hargus Ferguson, Ali Akhund & Mariola Moeyaert
2019. The Effect of Clear Speech on Temporal Metrics of Rhythm in Spanish-Accented Speakers of English. Language and Speech 62:1 ► pp. 5 ff.
Cuenca, María Heliodora, Marina M. Barrio, Pablo Anaya & Carmelo Establier
2012. Acoustic markers of syllabic stress in Spanish excellent oesophageal speakers. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 26:1 ► pp. 71 ff.
Gibson, Todd A. & Connie Summers
2021. A perceptual study of cross-linguistic influence on vocal fry use in women exposed to two languages. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism 24:3 ► pp. 373 ff.
Hualde, José Ignacio
2009. Unstressed words in Spanish. Language Sciences 31:2-3 ► pp. 199 ff.
Hualde, José Ignacio
2012. Stress and Rhythm. In The Handbook of Hispanic Linguistics, ► pp. 153 ff.
Kim, Ji Young
2020. Discrepancy between heritage speakers' use of suprasegmental cues in the perception and production of Spanish lexical stress. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 23:2 ► pp. 233 ff.
2022. Phonetic imitation of the acoustic realization of stress in Spanish: Production and perception. Journal of Phonetics 92 ► pp. 101139 ff.
Mallikarjun, Amritha, Emily Shroads & Rochelle S. Newman
2023. Language preference in the domestic dog (Canis familiaris). Animal Cognition 26:2 ► pp. 451 ff.
Nadeu, Marianna
2016. Phonetic and phonological vowel reduction in Central Catalan. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 46:1 ► pp. 33 ff.
Onosson, Sky & Jesse Stewart
2021. The Effects of Language Contact on Non-Native Vowel Sequences in Lexical Borrowings: The Case of Media Lengua. Language and Speech► pp. 002383092110149 ff.
Ortega-Llebaria, Marta, Hong Gu & Jieyu Fan
2013. English speakers' perception of Spanish lexical stress: Context-driven L2 stress perception. Journal of Phonetics 41:3-4 ► pp. 186 ff.
Ortega-Llebaria, Marta & Pilar Prieto
2011. Acoustic Correlates of Stress in Central Catalan and Castilian Spanish. Language and Speech 54:1 ► pp. 73 ff.
Payne, Elinor, Brechtje Post, Lluïsa Astruc, Pilar Prieto & Maria del Mar Vanrell
2012. Measuring Child Rhythm. Language and Speech 55:2 ► pp. 203 ff.
Rao, Rajiv
2011. Intonation in Spanish Classroom-style Didactic Speech. Journal of Language Teaching and Research 2:3
Rao, Rajiv
2015. On the phonological status of Spanish compound words. Word Structure 8:1 ► pp. 84 ff.
Rathcke, Tamara V. & Jane H. Stuart-Smith
2016. On the Tail of the Scottish Vowel Length Rule in Glasgow. Language and Speech 59:3 ► pp. 404 ff.
Romanelli, Sofía, Andrea Menegotto & Ron Smyth
2018. Stress-Induced Acoustic Variation in L2 and L1 Spanish Vowels. Phonetica 75:3 ► pp. 190 ff.
Sadeghi, Vahid
2017. Word-level prominence in Persian: An Experimental Study. Language and Speech 60:4 ► pp. 571 ff.
2016. Prominence, Contrast, and the Functional Load Hypothesis: An Acoustic Investigation. In Dimensions of Phonological Stress, ► pp. 123 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 2 may 2023. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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