
Published online:
01 January 2010
Published in print:
06 April 2006
Online ISBN:
9780191711091
Print ISBN:
9780199289158
Contents
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2.1 The instruments of speech 2.1 The instruments of speech
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2.2 Articulatory phonology 2.2 Articulatory phonology
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2.3 The organization of the speech code: universals 2.3 The organization of the speech code: universals
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2.3.1 The speech code is discrete and combinatorial 2.3.1 The speech code is discrete and combinatorial
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2.3.2 The speech code is a classification system shared by the whole linguistic community 2.3.2 The speech code is a classification system shared by the whole linguistic community
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2.3.3 Statistical regularities in the phoneme inventories of human languages 2.3.3 Statistical regularities in the phoneme inventories of human languages
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2.4 The diversity of speech codes in human languages 2.4 The diversity of speech codes in human languages
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2.5 Origins, development, and form 2.5 Origins, development, and form
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Cite
Oudeyer, Pierre-Yves, and James R. Hurford, 'The Human Speech Code', Self-Organization in the Evolution of Speech, Studies in the Evolution of Language (Oxford , 2006; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 Jan. 2010), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199289158.003.0002, accessed 14 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter begins by discussing the parts and functions of the human instrument of speech — the vocal tract. It talks about how the auditory system perceives sounds. It then discusses articulatory phonology and the organization of the speech code. The chapter introduces the way the speech code works, specifies the issues regarding its origins, and its diversity in human languages.
Keywords:
speech code, origin, articulatory phonology, human languages, speech code organization, vocal tract, supralaryngeal vocal tract, subglottal system, auditory system
Translator:
Collection:
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