1st Edition

Human Speech Some Observations, Experiments and Conclusions as to the Nature, Origin, Purpose and Possible Improvement of Human Speech

By Richard Paget Copyright 1930
    386 Pages
    by Routledge

    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is Volume XII of twenty-one in a series on Cognitive Psychology. Originally published in 1930, this book is addressed to the general reader, with a preference for him or her that is interested in Speech from one or other of its practical aspects, namely, as a means for communicating and recording ideas, as the basis of the arts of literature poetry and song, or as one of the principal accomplishments distinguishing man from the lower animals. Some of the results arrived a t may be of interest to linguists, to teachers of speech to the deaf, and to those musicians or scientists who are concerned in the practice or teaching of voice production and elocution, or in the improvement or “humanising” of the tone of organ pipes and other wind instruments. Its aim is to give, in simple language, an account of some personal observations and experiments on the phenomenon of human speech, and some conclusions and suggestions as to its probable origin and future development.

    List of Illustrations, Preface, CHAP. I. INTRODUCTION, CHAP. II. PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS AS TO THE VOCAL ORGANS, AND THEIR FUNCTION IN SPEECH. CHAP. III. OBSERVATIONS ON THE VOWEL RESONANCES, CHAP. IV. EXPERIMENTS WITH MODELS (VOWELS), CHAP. V. VOWEL SOUNDS—CONCLUDED—SINGLE OR DOUBLE RESONANCE ?, CHAP. VI. OBSERVATIONS AND EXPERIMENTS ON THE CONSONANTS, CHAP. VII. THE ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF SPEECH, CHAP. VIII. VOWEL AND CONSONANT SYMBOLISM, CHAP. IX. THE DEVELOPMENT OF DIFFERENT LANGUAGES, CHAP. X. VOICE PRODUCTION, CHAP. XI. MOUTH RESONANCE IN RELATION TO LARYNGEAL PITCH, CHAP. XII. ARTIFICIAL SPEECH AND SONG, CHAP. XIII. THE ADVANCEMENT OF LANGUAGE AND ITS NOTATION, APPENDIX. I. A NOTE ON THE DOUBLE-RESONATOR THEORY OF VOWEL SOUNDS, APPENDIX. II. TABLE OF FREQUENCIES i.e NUMBER OF COMPLETE VIBRATIONS PER SOUND, CORRESPONDING TO THE EQUAL TEMPERAMENT SCALE, APPENDIX. III. AUDIOGRAM OF THE AUTHOR'S HEARING, APPENDIX. IV. PAGET AND CLAY VARIABLE VOWEL MODEL, APPENDIX. V. SOME EXPRIMENTS WITH TUBULAR VOWEL MODELS, APPENDIX. VI. CONSONANT RESONANCES, APPENDIX. VII. AMERICAN AND ENGLISH VOWELS, APPENDIX. VIII. POLYNESIAN LANGUAGE, Index

    Biography

    Richard Paget