Using ultrasound tongue imaging to identify covert contrasts in children's speech
Date
2017
Authors
Citation
Zharkova, N., Gibbon, F.E. and Lee, A. (2017) ‘Using ultrasound tongue imaging to identify covert contrasts in children’s speech’, Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 31(1), pp. 21–34. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2016.1180713.
Abstract
Ultrasound tongue imaging has become a promising technique for
detecting covert contrasts, due to the developments in data analysis
methods that allow for processing information on tongue shape from
young children. An important feature concerning analyses of ultrasound
data from children who are likely to produce covert contrasts is that the
data are likely to be collected without head-to-transducer stabilisation,
due to the speakers' age. This article is a review of the existing methods
applicable in analysing data from non-stabilised recordings. The article
describes some of the challenges of ultrasound data collection from
children, and analysing these data, as well as possible ways to address
those challenges. Additionally, there are examples from typical and
disordered productions featuring covert contrasts, with illustrations of
quantifying differences in tongue shape between target speech sounds.