Once you’ve attended the first lecture, it’s time to start watching the associated videos on phonetics and doing the readings listed in module 2. If you’re not enrolled and you want to take this course, please make sure that you enrol as soon as possible!
Remember: The lab for module 1 will be held in week 2.
What you should know from Module 1
Students often ask if they need to memorise the IPA chart and all the physiological terms and symbols mentioned in this module. The answer is no! The main skill you need is to be able to read and interpret the IPA Chart. For this course, you’ll always be able to refer to IPA chart in the tests (as in most real life IPA related scenarios!).
We don’t go that deep into articulatory phonetics in this course, but you should make sure that you have an understanding of the foundational concepts:
- Basic vocal anatomy:
- What are active versus passive articulators
- Systems in Speech Production: the respiratory system, the phonation system, and the articulation
system
- Consonants:
- Voicing: what the difference between voiced versus unvoiced sounds
- Place: You should be able to relate place columns in the IPA chart to points of constriction in
the voice tract. - Manner: You should know the general differences between stops, taps, trill, fricative, lateral fricatives, approximants in terms of how they are articulated.
- Why are pulmonic and non-pulmonic consonants listed separately on the IPA chart?
- Vowels:
- Height
- Frontness
- rounding
- What’s the difference between monophthongs and diphthongs
Key Terms
- Articulation
- Articulators
- Manner (of articulation)
- Place (of articulation)
- Voicing
- Consonant
- Vowel
- Vowel quality
- Phonetic
- Acoustic
- Phone
- Contrast
You may find some helpful discussion on the topics covered in this module on the Foundations of Speech part of the speech.zone forum.
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- Forum
- Topics
- Last Post
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Acoustics
Sound, how it is produced and how it behaves
- 19
- 1 year, 3 months ago
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Phonetics and speech science
How speech is produced and perceived
- 19
- 2 years, 3 months ago
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Signal processing
Questions about feature extraction, time and pitch modification, or anything else we can do to speech waveforms.
- 46
- 3 months, 1 week ago
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Acoustics