Phonation
In
phonetics,
phonation is the "use of the
laryngeal system to generate an audible source of acoustic energy, i.e., sound, which can then be modified by the articulatory actions of the rest of the vocal apparatus."
Phonation has traditionally been seen as one dimension of phonetic
voicing, the degree of
glottal tension. (A second dimension of voicing is timing, called
voice onset time, or "VOT". When a sound is described as "half voiced", it may not be clear whether it is quality (phonation) or quantity (VOT) that is referred to.)
However, with recent advances in imaging technology, it has become apparent that in many languages phonation involves more than just the glottis.
A
voiced sound is produced when air expelled from the
lungs causes the
vocal cords to vibrate. This produces a fundamental tone accompanied by several non-harmonic overtones. The resulting sound is modified by movements in the
vocal tract, by the volume of the airflow and by the degree of constriction of the vocal cords. (During speech the flow of air is relatively small because of constrictions of the vocal cords.)
Vowels are usually voiced, as are many
consonants. (see
voiced consonant.)
If the vocal cords are lax and do not vibrate, then the sound (usually a
consonant) is
voiceless.
The vocal vibration is varied to produce
intonation and
tone. This is accomplished by varying the pressure of the air column under the glottis as well as the tension in the vocal cords themselves. These cause changes in the frequency of vocal-cord vibration, which generates the
fundamental pitch of the voice. Tone and intonation are not conveyed well by voiceless sounds, with their lax vocal cords, but the changes in airflow are still audible.
|
A continuum from closed glottis to open. The black triangles represent the arytenoid cartilages, the sail shapes the vocal cords, and the dotted circle the windpipe. |
In classic treatments of phonation, such as those of
Peter Ladefoged, phonation was considered to be a matter of points on a continuum of tension and closure of the vocal cords. More intricate mechanisms were occasionally described, but they were difficult to investigate, and until recently the state of the glottis and phonation were considered to be nearly synonymous.
If the vocal cords are completely relaxed, with the arytenoid cartilages apart for maximum airflow, the cords do not vibrate. This is
voiceless phonation, and is extremely common with
obstruents. If the arytenoids are pressed together for
glottal closure, the vocal cords block the airstream, producing stop sounds such as the
glottal stop. In between there is a
sweet spot of maximum vibration. This is
modal voice, and is the normal state for vowels and
sonorants in all the world's languages. However, the aperture of the arytenoid cartilages, and therefore the tension in the vocal cords, is one of degree between the end points of open and closed, and there are several intermediate situations utilized by various languages to make contrasting sounds.
For example,
Gujarati has vowels with a partially lax phonation called
breathy voice or
murmured, while
Burmese has vowels with a partially tense phonation called
creaky voice or
laryngealized. Both of these phonations have dedicated IPA diacritics, an under-umlaut and under-tilde. The Jalapa dialect of
Mazatec is unusual in contrasting both with modal voice in a three-way distinction. (Note that Mazatec is a tonal language, so the glottis is making several tonal distinctions simultaneously with the phonation distinctions.)
| Mazatec | | breathy voice | | he wears |
| modal voice | | tree |
| creaky voice | | he carries |
Note: There was an editing error in the source of this information. The latter two translations may have been mixed up.Javanese does not have modal voice in its
plosives, but contrasts two other points along the phonation scale, with more moderate departures from modal voice, called
slack voice and
stiff voice. The "muddy" consonants in
Shanghainese are slack voice; they contrast with tenuis and aspirated consonants.
Although each language may be somewhat different, it is convenient to classify these degrees of phonation into discrete categories. A series of seven alveolar plosives, with phonations ranging from an open/lax to a closed/tense glottis, are:
The IPA diacritics
under-ring and
subscript wedge, commonly called "voiceless" and "voiced", are sometimes added to the symbol for a voiced sound to indicate more lax/open (slack) and tense/closed (stiff) states of the glottis, respectively. (Ironically, adding the 'voicing' diacritic to the symbol for a voiced consonant indicates
less modal voicing, not more, because a modally voiced sound is already fully voiced, at its sweet spot, and any further tension in the vocal cords dampens their vibration.)
Unaccompanied phonation
It has long been noted that, both phonologically and historically, the
glottal consonants do not behave like other consonants. Phonetically, they have no
manner or
place of articulation other than the state of the glottis:
glottal closure for ,
breathy voice for , and
open airstream for . Some phoneticians have described these sounds as neither glottal nor consonantal, but instead as instances of pure phonation.
Register
Many languages combine phonation and tone into a single phonological system. In Mazatec, tone and phonation have separate lives, so that all possible combinations of its several tones and phonations can be utilized to distinguish words, but
Burmese tones do not contrast directly in this way. Rather each Burmese tone occurs only with a specific phonation that serves to make it more distinctive — or, from a different point of view, Burmese tone serves to make the phonations more distinct. These tone-phonation hybrids are called
registers.
In the last few decades it has become apparent that phonation may involve the entire larynx, with as many as six valves and muscles working either independently or together. From the glottis upward, these articulations are[
1]#
glottal (the vocal cords), producing the distinctions described above# ventricular (the 'false vocal cords', partially covering and damping the glottis)# arytenoid (sphincteric compression forwards and upwards)#
epiglotto-pharyngeal (retraction of the tongue and
epiglottis, potentially closing onto the pharyngeal wall)# raising or lowering of the entire
larynx# narrowing of the
pharynxUntil the development of
fiber-optic laryngoscopy, the full involvement of the larynx during speech production was not observable, and the interactions among the six laryngeal articulators is still poorly understood. However, at least two supra-glottal phonations appear to be widespread in the world's languages. These are
harsh voice ('ventricular' or 'pressed' voice), which involves overall constriction of the larynx, and
faucalized voice ('hollow' or 'yawny' voice), which involves overall expansion of the larynx.
The Bor dialect of
Dinka has contrastive modal, breathy, faucalized, and harsh voice in its vowels, as well as three tones. The
ad hoc diacritics employed in the literature are a subscript double quotation mark for faucalized voice, , and underlining for harsh voice, . Examples are,
| Voice | modal | breathy | harsh | faucalized |
|---|
| Bor Dinka | | | | |
| diarrhea | go ahead | scorpions | to swallow |
Other languages with these contrasts are
Bai (modal, breathy, and harsh voice),
Kabiye (faucalized and harsh voice, previously seen as
±ATR),
Somali (breathy and harsh voice).
Elements of laryngeal articulation or phonation may occur widely in the world's languages as phonetic detail even when not phonemically contrastive. For example, simultaneous glottal, ventricular, and arytenoid activity (for something other than
epiglottal consonants) has been observed in
Tibetan,
Korean,
Nuuchahnulth,
Nlaka'pamux,
Thai,
Sui, ,
Pame,
Arabic,
Tigrinya,
Cantonese, and
Yi.
In languages such as
French, all
obstruents occur in pairs, one modally voiced and one voiceless.
In
English, every voiced
fricative corresponds to a voiceless one. For the pairs of English
plosives, however, the distinction is better specified as
voice onset time rather than simply voice: In initial position /b d g/ are only partially voiced (voicing begins during the hold of the consonant), while /p t k/ are
aspirated (voicing doesn't begin until well after its release).
Certain English
morphemes have voiced and voiceless
allomorphs, such as the plural, verbal, and possessive endings spelled
-s (voiced in
kids but voiceless in
kits ) and the past-tense ending spelled
-ed (voiced in
buzzed but voiceless in
fished .
A few European languages, such as
Finnish or
Alemannic, have no phonemically voiced
obstruents but pairs of long and short consonants instead. Outside of Europe, a lack of voicing distinctions is not uncommon; indeed, in
Australian languages it is nearly universal.
*
List of phonetics topics*
Voiced consonant*
Voiceless consonant*
Breathy voice*
Slack voice*
Stiff voice*
Creaky voice*
Harsh voice*
Strident vowel*
Faucalized voice*
Voice onset time*
Voice organ*
Universität Stuttgart Speech production*
Université de Lausanne Speech production*
Edmondson & Esling paper on harsh, faucalized, and strident phonation (PDF)