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There is debate about how coarticulation is represented in
speakers' mental grammar, as well as the role that coarticulation
plays in explaining synchronic and diachronic sound patterns across
languages. This Element takes an individual-differences approach in
examining nasal coarticulation in production and perception in
order to understand how coarticulation is used phonologically in
American English. Experiment 1 examines coarticulatory variation
across 60 speakers. The relationship between speaking rate and
coarticulation is used to classify three types of coarticulation.
Experiment 2 is a perception study relating the differences in
realization of coarticulation across speakers to listeners'
identification of lexical items. The author demonstrates that
differences in speaker-specific patterns of coarticulation reflect
differences in the phonologization of vowel nasalization. Results
support predictions made by models that propose an active role by
both speakers and listeners in using coarticulatory variation to
express lexical contrasts and view coarticulation as represented in
an individual's grammar.
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