2005
DOI: 10.1159/000087223
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Adaptive Dispersion Theory and Phonological Vowel Reduction in Russian

Abstract: Russian exhibits a rich pattern of phonological vowel reduction, by which some vowel contrasts are neutralized in unstressed syllables. Recent work in phonology suggests a mechanism by which phonetic vowel reduction - compression of the overall vowel space due to target undershoot - might lead to patterns like Russian. Presenting acoustic data from 9 speakers of Russian, we use Euclidean distance measures, measures of F1-F0 and F2-F1, and Bayesian classification to provide a basic picture of how the overall vo… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(113 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…Similarly, the Russian pronunciation of 'Gorbachëv' as has a progressive rise in vowel prominence rather than alternation. Here, the vowel in the immediately prestress position, , is the neutralization of /a/ and /o/, but in other unstressed positions the realization is further midcentralized to , which is also shorter than the pre-stress realization (according to [73]) in non-palatalizing environments, and no longer, at least, in palatalizing environments.…”
Section: Language and Languages: Rhythmic Arhythmic Or Antirhythmic?mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Similarly, the Russian pronunciation of 'Gorbachëv' as has a progressive rise in vowel prominence rather than alternation. Here, the vowel in the immediately prestress position, , is the neutralization of /a/ and /o/, but in other unstressed positions the realization is further midcentralized to , which is also shorter than the pre-stress realization (according to [73]) in non-palatalizing environments, and no longer, at least, in palatalizing environments.…”
Section: Language and Languages: Rhythmic Arhythmic Or Antirhythmic?mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…We will refer to this type as final stress -the only context where stress is not final is in the instrumental plural, with the suffix [-am j i], where stress falls on the penult. The forms in (4) demonstrate another well-known feature of Russian phonology, unstressed vowel reduction (Crosswhite 1999;Barnes 2004;Padgett and Tabain 2005;Gouskova 2010 …”
Section: Lexical Stress In Russianmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 1 Non-pretonic unstressed Pretonic Stressed Vysotskij (1973) 58 (49%) 80 (68%) 118 (100%) Barnes (2004) 25 (29%) 68 (79%) 86 (100%) Padgett & Tabain (2005) 40 (47%) 59 (59%) 85 (100%) It is well-known that dialects differ both in the quality and duration of the pretonic vowel (Bethin 2006;Kasatkina & Shchigel' 1996;Al'muxamedova & Kul'sharipova 1980;Stroganova 1973). In the standard dialect, which is the focus of this article, the pretonic vowel may or may not be shorter than the stressed vowel, but it is considerably longer than other unstressed vowels.…”
Section: Phonological Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%