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Effects of speaking rate, loudness, and clarity modifications on kinematic endpoint variability.

It is virtually impossible for a speaker to produce identical articulatory movements across several repetitions of the same utterance. This study examined how kinematic endpoint variability, defined as the positional variability of an articulator at its positional extremum, changes in response to cued speech behavioral modifications. As a second step, this study examined the strength of association between articulator speed and kinematic endpoint variability. Seventeen speakers repeated the sentence "Buy Kaia a kite" 10 times under the following conditions: typical, loud, slow, and clear speech. Speech movements were recorded using 3D electromagnetic articulography. Endpoint variability was measured at the maximum jaw opening position during "buy" and at the maximum elevation of the tongue back during /k/ in "Kaia". Significant speech modification effects were found for the jaw but not for the tongue. Specifically, typical speech yielded significantly lower kinematic endpoint variability than slow and loud speech. Further, jaw peak speed was moderately correlated with kinematic endpoint variability (r = .43, p < .01). Findings for jaw movements suggest that speech modifications that elicit an increase in speed (i.e. loud speech) may negatively impact kinematic endpoint precision; however, other factors such as motor learning and lacking emphasis on spatial precision (i.e. slow speech) may also play a role.

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