| REQUIREMENTS | PERCENTAGES |
|---|---|
| Readings and class discussions | 10% |
| Assignments (about 6) | 60% |
| Final paper/project (may be experimental or literature-based) | 30% |
We will be considering three fundamental questions:
We will also be learning experimental and analytical techniques that enable us to address these (and other) questions.
I will assume a basic knowledge of articulatory phonetic description, transcription and phonological theory.
| REQUIREMENTS | PERCENTAGES |
|---|---|
| Readings and class discussions | 10% |
| Assignments (about 6) | 60% |
| Final paper/project (may be experimental or literature-based) | 30% |
For any use or distribution of these materials, please cite as follows:
Edward Flemming, course materials for 24.963 Linguistic Phonetics, Fall 2005. MIT OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu/), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Downloaded on [DD Month YYYY].
Calendar
| SES # | TOPICS |
|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction: Introduction to acoustics |
| 2 | Audition A/D (Analog to Digital) conversion |
| 3 | Position of phonetics in grammars |
| 4 | Source-filter theory |
| 5 | Acoustics of vowels Spectral analysis techniques |
| 6 | Quantal theory Adaptive dispersion Source-filter analysis of the properties of speech sounds: Fricatives and stops |
| 7 | Introduction to statistics |
| 8 | Speech perception I Source-filter analysis of speech sounds: Nasals and laterals |
| 9 | Speech production Models of coarticulation |
| 10 | Timing and coordination Prosody and speech production |
| 11 | Speech perception II: The problem of variability |
| 12 | Student presentations |