964 results on '"phonetics"'
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2. Phoneme or Cluster: A Critical Survey
- Author
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Devine, A. M.
- Abstract
Discusses the issue of segmentation in phonological analysis. (VM)
- Published
- 1971
3. Differences between Phonemes
- Author
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Altmann, G.
- Abstract
Research supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. (DD)
- Published
- 1969
4. Optional Word-Final Consonants in French
- Author
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Malecot, Andre and Richman, Marie
- Abstract
Research supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, The National Institutes of Health, The American Philosophical Society, and The Fulbright Commission. (DD)
- Published
- 1972
5. The Mason-Alberta Phonetic Segmenter: a forced alignment system based on deep neural networks and interpolation.
- Author
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Kelley, Matthew C., Perry, Scott James, and Tucker, Benjamin V.
- Abstract
Given an orthographic transcription, forced alignment systems automatically determine boundaries between segments in speech, facilitating the use of large corpora. In the present paper, we introduce a neural network-based forced alignment system, the Mason-Alberta Phonetic Segmenter (MAPS). MAPS serves as a testbed for two possible improvements we pursue for forced alignment systems. The first is treating the acoustic model as a tagger, rather than a classifier, motivated by the common understanding that segments are not truly discrete and often overlap. The second is an interpolation technique to allow more precise boundaries than the typical 10 ms limit in modern systems. During testing, all system configurations we trained significantly outperformed the state-of-the-art Montreal Forced Aligner in the 10 ms boundary placement tolerance threshold. The greatest difference achieved was a 28.13 % relative performance increase. The Montreal Forced Aligner began to slightly outperform our models at around a 30 ms tolerance. We also reflect on the training process for acoustic modeling in forced alignment, highlighting how the output targets for these models do not match phoneticians' conception of similarity between phones and that reconciling this tension may require rethinking the task and output targets or how speech itself should be segmented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
6. The Effects of Language Dominance in the Perception and Production of the Galician Mid Vowel Contrasts
- Author
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Amengual, Mark and Chamorro, Pilar
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Dominance ,Cerebral ,Female ,Humans ,Language ,Male ,Multilingualism ,Pattern Recognition ,Visual ,Phonation ,Phonetics ,Reading ,Semantics ,Sound Spectrography ,Speech Discrimination Tests ,Speech Perception ,Urban Population ,Verbal Behavior ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Language ,Communication and Culture ,Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology - Abstract
AimsThis study investigates the perception and production of the Galician mid vowel contrasts by 54 early Spanish-Galician bilinguals in the cities of Vigo and Santiago (Galicia, Spain). Empirical data is provided to examine the role of language dominance in the perception and production of Galician mid vowel contrasts in order to determine whether the Galician vowel system is becoming more Spanish-like as a result of extensive contact with Spanish in urban areas.MethodsPerception and production data for each mid vowel contrast were collected in (1) binary forced-choice identification tasks, (2) AX discrimination tasks and (3) a reading-aloud task.ResultsResults from binary forced-choice identification and AX discrimination tasks indicate that Spanish-dominant bilinguals have great difficulty in discriminating between these mid vowels while Galician-dominant subjects display a robust categorical identification of the two mid vowel categories. Acoustic analyses of their productions show that Galician-dominant bilinguals implement a Galician-specific /e/-/x025B;/ contrast but Spanish-dominant ones produce a single, merged Spanish-like front mid vowel. However, both language dominance groups seem to maintain a more robust /o/-/x0254;/ contrast. This asymmetry between front and back mid vowels is found in the productions of both language dominance groups.ConclusionThese results show that language dominance is a strong predictor of the production and perception abilities of Spanish-Galician bilinguals, and that only Galician-dominant subjects in these urban areas possess two independent phonetic categories in the front and back mid vowel space.
- Published
- 2016
7. What R Mandarin Chinese /ɹ/s? - acoustic and articulatory features of Mandarin Chinese rhotics.
- Author
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Chen S, Whalen DH, and Mok PPK
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, China, Adult, Young Adult, Speech Production Measurement, Ultrasonography, East Asian People, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Tongue physiology, Language
- Abstract
Rhotic sounds are well known for their considerable phonetic variation within and across languages and their complexity in speech production. Although rhotics in many languages have been examined and documented, the phonetic features of Mandarin rhotics remain unclear, and debates about the prevocalic rhotic (the syllable-onset rhotic) persist. This paper extends the investigation of rhotic sounds by examining the articulatory and acoustic features of Mandarin Chinese rhotics in prevocalic, syllabic (the rhotacized vowel [ɚ]), and postvocalic (r-suffix) positions. Eighteen speakers from Northern China were recorded using ultrasound imaging. Results showed that Mandarin syllabic and postvocalic rhotics can be articulated with various tongue shapes, including tongue-tip-up retroflex and tongue-tip-down bunched shapes. Different tongue shapes have no significant acoustic differences in the first three formants, demonstrating a many-to-one articulation-acoustics relationship. The prevocalic rhotics in our data were found to be articulated only with bunched tongue shapes, and were sometimes produced with frication noise at the start. In general, rhotics in all syllable positions are characterized by a close F2 and F3, though the prevocalic rhotic has a higher F2 and F3 than the syllabic and postvocalic rhotics. The effects of syllable position and vowel context are also discussed., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
8. The Effects of Language Dominance in the Perception and Production of the Galician Mid Vowel Contrasts.
- Author
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Amengual, Mark and Chamorro, Pilar
- Subjects
Humans ,Speech Discrimination Tests ,Sound Spectrography ,Language ,Verbal Behavior ,Speech Perception ,Pattern Recognition ,Visual ,Dominance ,Cerebral ,Phonation ,Multilingualism ,Reading ,Phonetics ,Semantics ,Urban Population ,Female ,Male ,Pattern Recognition ,Visual ,Dominance ,Cerebral ,Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Communication and Culture ,Language ,Communication and Culture - Abstract
AimsThis study investigates the perception and production of the Galician mid vowel contrasts by 54 early Spanish-Galician bilinguals in the cities of Vigo and Santiago (Galicia, Spain). Empirical data is provided to examine the role of language dominance in the perception and production of Galician mid vowel contrasts in order to determine whether the Galician vowel system is becoming more Spanish-like as a result of extensive contact with Spanish in urban areas.MethodsPerception and production data for each mid vowel contrast were collected in (1) binary forced-choice identification tasks, (2) AX discrimination tasks and (3) a reading-aloud task.ResultsResults from binary forced-choice identification and AX discrimination tasks indicate that Spanish-dominant bilinguals have great difficulty in discriminating between these mid vowels while Galician-dominant subjects display a robust categorical identification of the two mid vowel categories. Acoustic analyses of their productions show that Galician-dominant bilinguals implement a Galician-specific /e/-/x025B;/ contrast but Spanish-dominant ones produce a single, merged Spanish-like front mid vowel. However, both language dominance groups seem to maintain a more robust /o/-/x0254;/ contrast. This asymmetry between front and back mid vowels is found in the productions of both language dominance groups.ConclusionThese results show that language dominance is a strong predictor of the production and perception abilities of Spanish-Galician bilinguals, and that only Galician-dominant subjects in these urban areas possess two independent phonetic categories in the front and back mid vowel space.
- Published
- 2015
9. The development of English language connected speech perception skills: an empirical study on Chinese EFL children.
- Author
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Bi H, Zare S, and Yan R
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Multilingualism, Language, China, Language Development, East Asian People, Speech Perception, Phonetics
- Abstract
Connected speech processes (CSPs) occur randomly in everyday conversations of native speakers; however, such phonological variations can bring about challenges for non-native listeners. Looking at CSP literature, there seems to be very few studies that involved young foreign language learners. Therefore, the present study aimed to explore the development of connected speech perception skills by focusing on 201 9- to 12-year-old Chinese EFL children. It also incorporated systematic error analysis to further probe into the specific perceptual difficulties. The results indicate that: (1) Despite a significantly ascending trend for the overall growth of perception skills, no significant differences were found between 11 and 12 year olds in elision and contraction, which suggests that the developmental trend varied depending on different CSP types; (2) Although random errors decreased with age, the number of lexicon and syntax errors gradually increased, and the distribution of perceptual errors shifted from the level of words and syllables to that of phonemes; (3) The primary types of errors resulting in the perception difficulties for elision and contraction were consonant errors, grammatical errors and morphology errors. Ergo, this study enhances the understanding of connected speech perception among EFL children and provides some implications for EFL/ESL listening instructions., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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10. Revisiting the nature and the context of T4 alternations: insights from disyllabic, trisyllabic and quadrisyllabic word/digit productions in Taiwan Mandarin.
- Author
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Liu CT
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Taiwan, Speech Production Measurement, Adult, Young Adult, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Language
- Abstract
The tone values of a Tone 4 (T4) syllable are conventionally assumed to change from '51' to '53' when the syllable is followed by another T4 syllable in Mandarin Chinese. Literature focusing on T4 alternation is still inconclusive regarding the contexts for the alternations and whether the phenomenon should be better categorized as tone sandhi (i.e., represented as an abstract phonological rule in mental grammar) or tonal coarticulation (i.e., a natural articulation phenomenon at the phonetic level). The current study probes into these issues by focusing on disyllabic pseudowords, right-branching trisyllabic words as well as unstructured trisyllabic and quadrisyllabic digits. Productions from a total of 148 participants were collected and fundamental frequency (f0) contours, vowel lengths and f0 slopes were included in the analysis. The results from the experiments supported the tonal coarticulation view and showed that the trigger for the alternations was the high-onset tones following T4. Implications to the phonological analysis on tonal alternations in Mandarin Chinese are discussed., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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11. Are Serbian and English listeners insensitive to lexical pitch accents in Serbian?
- Author
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Dušan Nikolić and Stephen Winters
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Phonetics ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,Pitch Perception ,Serbia ,Language and Linguistics ,Language - Abstract
The paper investigated possible perceptual insensitivity effects in the perception of lexical pitch accents by native and non-native listeners, that is, by Serbian and English listeners, respectively. The objective of the study was to explore which word-prosodic categories listeners used when they were required to contrast and recall sequences of lexical pitch accents. To that effect, Serbian and English listeners performed a Sequence Recall Task (SRT) in which they contrasted pairs of non-words with different Serbian lexical pitch accent types, and recalled the sequences of these non-words under different memory load conditions. Listeners’ answers were coded correct and incorrect and the accuracy scores between the groups were compared and analyzed. Both groups had almost identical levels of accuracy and they performed well above chance level on each contrast. Neither group exhibited any effects of perceptual insensitivity to lexical pitch accents. English (non-native) listeners did not differ in their performance from native Serbian listeners, which, contrary to what previous research suggested, implied that one’s native language word-prosodic category inventory did not preclude the encoding of non-native word-prosodic categories. Instead, non-native listeners were capable of deploying different prosodic resources such as post-lexical pitch accents to recall the sequences.
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- 2022
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12. The interaction between predictability and pre-boundary lengthening on syllable duration in Taiwan Southern Min
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Sheng-Fu Wang
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Phonetics ,Taiwan ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,Speech ,Language and Linguistics - Abstract
This study investigated how predictability and prosodic phrasing interact in accounting for the variability of syllable duration in Taiwan Southern Min. Speech data were extracted from 8 hours of spontaneous speech. Three predictability measurements were examined: bigram surprisal, bigram informativity, and lexical frequency. Results showed that higher informativity and surprisal led to longer syllables. As for the interaction with prosodic positions, there was a general weakening of predictability effects for syllables closer to the boundary, especially in the pre-boundary position, where pre-boundary lengthening was the strongest. However, the effect of word informativity appeared to be least modulated by this effect of boundary marking. These findings are consistent with a hypothesis that prosodic structure modulates the predictability effects on phonetic variability. The robustness of informativity in predicting syllable duration also suggests a possibility of stored phonetic variants associated with a word's usual contextual predictability.
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- 2022
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13. Exploring and explaining variation in phrase-final f0 movements in spontaneous Papuan Malay.
- Author
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Kaland C and Grice M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Indonesia, Speech Acoustics, Adult, Linguistics, Speech Production Measurement, Language, Phonetics
- Abstract
This study investigates the variation in phrase-final f0 movements found in dyadic unscripted conversations in Papuan Malay, an Eastern Indonesian language. This is done by a novel combination of exploratory and confirmatory classification techniques. In particular, this study investigates the linguistic factors that potentially drive f0 contour variation in phrase-final words produced in a naturalistic interactive dialogue task. To this end, a cluster analysis, manual labelling and random forest analysis are carried out to reveal the main sources of contour variation. These are: taking conversational interaction into account; turn transition, topic continuation, information structure (givenness and contrast), and context-independent properties of words such as word class, syllable structure, voicing and intrinsic f0. Results indicate that contour variation in Papuan Malay, in particular f0 direction and target level, is best explained by turn transitions between speakers, corroborating similar findings for related languages. The applied methods provide opportunities to further lower the threshold of incorporating intonation and prosody in the early stages of language documentation., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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14. The role of place and manner of articulation in Kurtöp tonogenesis: refining the model.
- Author
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Hyslop G and Plane S
- Subjects
- Humans, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Language
- Abstract
While the general acoustic mechanisms that explain the development of tone in language have been understood since at least Maspero (1912. Étude Sur La Phonétique Historique de La Langue Annamite: Les Initiales. Bulletin de l'École Française d'Extrême-Orient 12. 1-126), we are still far from having a predictive theory of tonogenesis. Kurtöp, a Tibeto-Burman language of Bhutan shown to be undergoing tonogenesis, provides a rare opportunity to advance our understanding of how and why languages develop lexical tone. This study examines the role that sonority and place of articulation have in the spread of tone from voicing contrasts on preceding consonants in Kurtöp. First, we find that tone is more likely to be produced following fricatives than when following stops. Second, we see that within the stops, tone phonologises more readily following some places of articulation over others. Taken as a whole, this shows us that tone is moving through Kurtöp, following the most sonorous segments first and moving to the least sonorous segments. These findings thus help us refine our theory of tonogenesis and show that functional pressures have strong influences in this particular pathway of sound change., (© 2024 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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15. Hiatus resolution and linguistic diversity in Australian English.
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Penney J, Cox F, and Gibson A
- Subjects
- Humans, Phonetics, Speech Production Measurement, Australia, Language, Multilingualism, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Vowel hiatus is typically resolved in Australian English through complementary strategies of liaison (j-gliding/w-gliding/linking-r) and glottalisation. Previous work suggests a change in progress towards increased use of glottalisation as an optimal hiatus-breaker, which creates syntagmatic contrast between adjacent vowels, particularly when the right-edge vowel is strong (i.e. at the foot boundary). Liaison continues to be used when right-edge vowels are weak, but glottalisation as a hiatus resolution strategy in general appears to be increasing and may be more common in speakers from non-English speaking backgrounds raising the question of whether exposure to linguistic diversity could be driving the change. We examine hiatus resolution in speakers from neighbourhoods that vary according to levels of language diversity. We elicited gliding and linking-r hiatus contexts to determine how prosodic strength of flanking vowels and speakers' exposure to linguistic diversity affect hiatus resolution. Results confirm that glottalisation occurs most frequently with strong right-edge vowels, and gliding/linking-r are more likely with weak right-edge vowels. However, strategies differ between gliding and linking-r contexts, suggesting differing implementation mechanisms. In addition, speakers from ethnolinguistically diverse areas produce increased glottalisation in all contexts supporting the idea that change to the hiatus resolution system may be driven by language contact., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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16. The effects of watching subtitled videos on the perception of L2 connected speech by L1 Chinese-L2 English speakers.
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Zhu Y and Hu J
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Asian People, China, Language, Phonetics, Video Recording, Schools, Students, Multilingualism, Speech Perception
- Abstract
The current study explores whether watching subtitled videos could facilitate L1 Chinese-L2 English speakers' perception of L2 English connected speech. Three hundred ninty seven Chinese college students of L2 English completed a video-based spot dictation task after watching English videos with or without L1/L2 subtitles, featuring various connected speech types (e.g., linking, deletion, and their combinations). Results suggested an overall facilitation effect of watching videos on L2 connected speech perception, which was modulated by proficiency, subtitle form, and the complexity of connected speech. First, subtitled videos were more facilitative than non-subtitled videos in L2 perception. Second, participants with higher L2 proficiency better perceived English connected speech than those with lower proficiency. Third, the more connective devices an item used, the more difficult it was for L2 perception. When this complexity was controlled, the L2 perception was not influenced by connected speech type. Finally, the complexity of connected speech also mediated the subtitle facilitation effects. When the connected speech involved triple connective devices, L2 speakers benefited more from L1 subtitles than L2 subtitles. The findings can provide insights into multi-modal speech perception and English connected speech learning., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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17. Dynamic specification of vowels in Hijazi Arabic.
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Almurashi W, Al-Tamimi J, and Khattab G
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- Male, Female, Humans, Language, Acoustics, Cues, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics
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Research on various languages shows that dynamic approaches to vowel acoustics - in particular Vowel-Inherent Spectral Change (VISC) - can play a vital role in characterising and classifying monophthongal vowels compared with a static model. This study's aim was to investigate whether dynamic cues also allow for better description and classification of the Hijazi Arabic (HA) vowel system, a phonological system based on both temporal and spectral distinctions. Along with static and dynamic F1 and F2 patterns, we evaluated the extent to which vowel duration, F0, and F3 contribute to increased/decreased discriminability among vowels. Data were collected from 20 native HA speakers (10 females and 10 males) producing eight HA monophthongal vowels in a word list with varied consonantal contexts. Results showed that dynamic cues provide further insights regarding HA vowels that are not normally gleaned from static measures alone. Using discriminant analysis, the dynamic cues (particularly the seven-point model) had relatively higher classification rates, and vowel duration was found to play a significant role as an additional cue. Our results are in line with dynamic approaches and highlight the importance of looking beyond static cues and beyond the first two formants for further insights into the description and classification of vowel systems., (© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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18. Variability in cross-language and cross-dialect perception. How Irish and Chinese migrants process Australian English vowels.
- Author
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Diskin-Holdaway C, Loakes D, and Clothier J
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Australia, Language, Phonetics, China, Transients and Migrants, Speech Perception
- Abstract
We investigate how three adult groups - experienced L2 English listeners; experienced D2 (second dialect) listeners; and native L1/D1 listeners - categorise Australian English (AusE) lax front vowels /ɪ e æ/ in /hVt/, /hVl/ and /mVl/ environments in a forced-choice categorisation task of synthesised continua. In study 1, AusE listeners show predictable categorisations, with an effect of coarticulation raising the vowel in perception for nasal onset stimuli, and a following lateral lowering the vowel in perception. In study 2, Irish (D2) and Chinese listeners (L2) have different categorisations than AusE listeners, likely guided by their D1/L1. Coarticulation influences the D1/D2 groups in similar ways, but results in more difficulty and less agreement for the Chinese. We also investigate the role of extralinguistic factors. For the Chinese listeners, higher proficiency in English does not correlate with more Australian-like categorisation behaviour. However, having fewer Chinese in their social network results in more Australian-like categorisation for some stimuli. These findings lend partial support to the role of experience and exposure in L2/D2 contexts, whereby categorisation is likely still driven by native categories, with increased exposure leading to better mapping, but not to a restructuring of underlying phonetic categories., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2024
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19. Training the pronunciation of L2 vowels under different conditions: the use of non-lexical materials and masking noise
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Joan C. Mora, Mireia Ortega, Ingrid Mora-Plaza, and Cristina Aliaga-García
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Phonetics ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,Multilingualism ,Noise ,Language and Linguistics ,Language - Abstract
The current study extends traditional perceptual high-variability phonetic training (HVPT) in a foreign language learning context by implementing a comprehensive training paradigm that combines perception (discrimination and identification) and production (immediate repetition) training tasks and by exploring two potentially enhancing training conditions: the use of non-lexical training stimuli and the presence of masking noise during production training. We assessed training effects on L1-Spanish/Catalan bilingual EFL learners’ production of a difficult English vowel contrast (/æ/-/ʌ/). The participants (N = 62) were randomly assigned to either non-lexical (N = 24) or lexical (N = 24) training and were further subdivided into two groups, one trained in noise (N = 12) and one in silence (N = 12). An untrained control group (N = 14) was also tested. Training gains, measured through spectral distance scores (Euclidean distances) with respect to native speakers’ productions of /æ/ and /ʌ/, were assessed through delayed word and sentence repetition tasks. The results showed an advantage of non-lexical training over lexical training, detrimental effects of noise for participants trained with nonwords, but not for those trained with words, and less accurate production of vowels elicited in isolated words than in words embedded in sentences, where training gains were only observable for participants trained with nonwords.
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- 2022
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20. Acoustic classification of coronal stops of Eastern Punjabi
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Qandeel, Hussain and Alexei, Kochetov
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Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Phonetics ,Voice Quality ,Humans ,Acoustics ,Speech Acoustics ,Language and Linguistics ,Language - Abstract
Punjabi is an Indo-Aryan language which contrasts a rich set of coronal stops at dental and retroflex places of articulation across three laryngeal configurations. Moreover, all these stops occur contrastively in various positions (word-initially, -medially, and -finally). The goal of this study is to investigate how various coronal place and laryngeal contrasts are distinguished acoustically both within and across word positions. A number of temporal and spectral correlates were examined in data from 13 speakers of Eastern Punjabi: Voice Onset Time, release and closure durations, fundamental frequency, F1-F3 formants, spectral center of gravity and standard deviation, H1*-H2*, and cepstral peak prominence. The findings indicated that higher formants and spectral measures were most important for the classification of place contrasts across word positions, whereas laryngeal contrasts were reliably distinguished by durational and voice quality measures. Word-medially and -finally, F2 and F3 of the preceding vowels played a key role in distinguishing the dental and retroflex stops, while spectral noise measures were more important word-initially. The findings of this study contribute to a better understanding of factors involved in the maintenance of typologically rare and phonetically complex sets of place and laryngeal contrasts in the coronal stops of Indo-Aryan languages.
- Published
- 2021
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21. More on the articulation of devoiced [u] in Tokyo Japanese: effects of surrounding consonants
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Shigeto Kawahara and Jason A. Shaw
- Subjects
Consonant ,Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Place of articulation ,Tongue dorsum ,Phonetics ,Tongue body ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,Japan ,Tongue ,Voice ,Humans ,Affect (linguistics) ,Tokyo ,Articulation (phonetics) ,Psychology ,Gesture - Abstract
Past work investigating the lingual articulation of devoiced vowels in Tokyo Japanese has revealed optional but categorical deletion. Some devoiced vowels retained a full lingual target, just like their voiced counterparts, whereas others showed trajectories that are best modelled as targetless, i.e., linear interpolation between the surrounding vowels. The current study explored the hypothesis that this probabilistic deletion is modulated by the identity of the surrounding consonants. A new EMA experiment with an extended stimulus set replicates the core finding of Shaw, Jason & Shigeto Kawahara. 2018b. The lingual gesture of devoiced [u] in Japanese. Journal of Phonetics 66. 100–119. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2017.09.007 that Japanese devoiced [u] sometimes lacks a tongue body raising gesture. The current results moreover show that surrounding consonants do indeed affect the probability of tongue dorsum targetlessness. We found that deletion of devoiced vowels is affected by the place of articulation of the preceding consonant; deletion is more likely following a coronal fricative than a labial fricative. Additionally, we found that the manner combination of the flanking consonants, fricative–fricative versus fricative–stop, also has an effect, at least for some speakers; however, unlike the effect of C1 place, the direction of the manner combination effect varies across speakers with some deleting more often in fricative–stop environments and others more often in fricative–fricative environments.
- Published
- 2021
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22. The duration of word-final /s/ differs across morphological categories in English: evidence from pseudowords
- Author
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Dinah Baer-Henney, Ingo Plag, and Dominic Schmitz
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Linguistics and Language ,Speech production ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,British English ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,language.human_language ,Pseudoword ,Speech Production Measurement ,Phonetics ,Morpheme ,Duration (music) ,Clitic ,language ,Speech ,Production (computer science) ,Psychology ,Language ,Plural - Abstract
Previous research suggests that different types of word-final /s/ and /z/ (e.g. non-morphemic vs. plural or clitic morpheme) in English show realisational differences in duration. However, there is disagreement on the nature of these differences, as experimental studies have provided evidence for durational differences of the opposite direction as results from corpus studies (i.e. non-morphemic > plural > clitic /s/). The experimental study reported here focuses on four types of word-final /s/ in English, i.e. non-morphemic, plural, and is- and has-clitic /s/. We conducted a pseudoword production study with native speakers of Southern British English. The results show that non-morphemic /s/ is significantly longer than plural /s/, which in turn is longer than clitic /s/, while there is no durational difference between the two clitics. This aligns with previous corpus rather than experimental studies. Thus, the morphological category of a word-final /s/ appears to be a robust predictor for its phonetic realisation influencing speech production in such a way that systematic subphonemic differences arise. This finding calls for revisions of current models of speech production in which morphology plays no role in later stages of production.
- Published
- 2021
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23. Spatiotemporal coordination in word-medial stop-lateral and s-stop clusters of American English
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Adamantios I. Gafos, Maria Lialiou, and Stavroula Sotiropoulou
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Consonant ,Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,American English ,Context (language use) ,Language and Linguistics ,Identity (music) ,Linguistics ,Tautosyllabic ,Phonetics ,Vowel ,Humans ,Syllabic verse ,Word (group theory) ,Language ,Mathematics - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the relation between syllabic organization and intersegmental spatiotemporal coordination using Electromagnetic Articulometry recordings from seven speakers of American English (henceforth, English). Whereas previous work on English has focused on word-initial clusters (preceding a vowel whose identity was not systematically varied), the present work examined word-medial clusters /pl, kl, sp, sk/ in the context of three different vowel heights (high, mid, low). Our results provide evidence for a global organization for the segments involved in these cluster-vowel combinations. This is reflected in a number of ways: compression of the prevocalic consonant and reduction of CV timing in the word-medial cluster case compared to its singleton paired word in both stop-lateral and s-stop clusters, early vowel initiation (as permitted by the clusters’ phonetic properties), and presence of compensatory relations between phonetic properties of different segments or intersegmental transitions within each cluster. In other words, we find that the global organization presiding over the segments partaking in these word-medial tautosyllabic CCVs is pleiotropic, that is, simultaneously expressed in multiple phonetic exponents rather than via a privileged metric such as c-center stability or any other such given single measure employed in previous works.
- Published
- 2021
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24. Do letters matter? The influence of spelling on acoustic duration.
- Author
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Muschalik J and Kunter G
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech, Acoustics, Research Design, Language, Phonetics
- Abstract
The present article describes a modified and extended replication of a corpus study by Brewer (2008. Phonetic reflexes of orthographic characteristics in lexical representation . Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona PhD thesis) which reports differences in the acoustic duration of homophonous but heterographic sounds. The original findings point to a quantity effect of spelling on acoustic duration, i.e., the more letters are used to spell a sound, the longer the sound's duration. Such a finding would have extensive theoretical implications and necessitate more research on how exactly spelling would come to influence speech production. However, the effects found by Brewer (2008) did not consistently reach statistical significance and the analysis did not include many of the covariates which are known by now to influence segment duration, rendering the robustness of the results at least questionable. Employing a more nuanced operationalization of graphemic units and a more advanced statistical analysis, the current replication fails to find the reported effect of letter quantity. Instead, we find an effect of graphemic complexity. Speakers realize consonants that do not have a visible graphemic correlate with shorter durations: the /s/ in tux is shorter that the /s/ in fuss . The effect presumably resembles orthographic visibility effects found in perception. In addition, our results highlight the need for a more rigorous approach to replicability in linguistics., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
25. Perception of illusory clusters: the role of native timing.
- Author
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Kwon H and Chitoran I
- Subjects
- Humans, Language, Hearing, Confusion, Phonetics, Speech Perception
- Abstract
We explore the influence of native timing patterns on nonnative speech perception, by asking whether a nonnative CVCV sequence can be perceived as CCV when the temporal organization of nonnative CVCV is similar to native CCV. To explore this question, Georgian listeners are tested on a CCa-CVCá discrimination in French. Georgian has a rich word-onset cluster inventory, with component consonants loosely timed. The loose timing often, though not always, results in a schwa-like CC transition. French, the stimulus language, exhibits tighter timing in biconsonantal clusters, no vocalic transitions, and a reduced non-prominent first vowel in CVCá sequences. We hypothesize that the cross-language difference in inter-consonantal timing can facilitate the perception of an illusory cluster when Georgian listeners hear French CVCá. The findings reveal such perceptual confusion, particularly in the CCa-CøCá contrast in which the nonnative /ø/ is phonetically similar to the CC transition in Georgian, both in terms of temporal organizations and tongue shape. This confirms the possibility of illusory clusters, which is consistent with the interpretation that Georgian listeners utilize their knowledge of how word-onset CC clusters are temporally implemented in their native language when responding to the task. We propose that the timing pattern may constitute language-specific knowledge and that it can influence the perceptual assimilation patterns in nonnative speech perception., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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26. On the two rhotic schwas in Southwestern Mandarin: when homophony meets morphology in articulation.
- Author
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Huang J, Hsieh FF, Chang YC, and Tiede M
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech Acoustics, Phonetics, Tongue, Acoustics, Larynx
- Abstract
This is an acoustic and articulatory study of the two rhotic schwas in Southwestern Mandarin (SWM), i.e., the er -suffix (a functional morpheme) and the rhotic schwa phoneme. Electromagnetic Articulography (EMA) and ultrasound results from 10 speakers show that the two rhotic schwas were both produced exclusively with the bunching of the tongue body. No retroflex versions of the two rhotic schwas were found, nor was retraction of the tongue root into the pharynx observed. On the other hand, the er -suffix and the rhotic schwa, though homophonous, significantly differ in certain types of acoustic and articulatory measurements. In particular, more pronounced lip protrusion is involved in the production of the rhotic schwa phoneme than in the er -suffix. It is equally remarkable that contrast preservation is not an issue because the two rhotic schwas are in complementary distribution. Taken together, the present results suggest that while morphologically-induced phonetic variation can be observed in articulation, gestural economy may act to constrain articulatory variability, resulting in the absence of retroflex tongue variants in the two rhotic schwas, the only two remaining r-colored sounds in SWM., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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27. Jonathan Barnes and Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel: Prosodic Theory and Practice.
- Author
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Lin D
- Subjects
- Humans, Phonetics, Language
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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28. A perception-induced /t/-to-/k/ sound change: evidence from a cross-linguistic study.
- Author
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Chu MN, Gussenhoven C, and van Hout R
- Subjects
- Humans, Language, Sound, Sound Spectrography, Phonetics, Speech Perception
- Abstract
John Ohala claimed that the source of sound change may lie in misperceptions which can be replicated in the laboratory. We tested this claim for a historical change of /t/ to /k/ in the coda in the Southern Min dialect of Chaoshan. We conducted a forced-choice segment identification task with CVC syllables in which the final C varied across the segments [p t k ʔ] in addition to a number of further variables, including the V, which ranged across [i u a]. The results from three groups of participants whose native languages have the coda systems /p t k ʔ/ (Zhangquan), /p k ʔ/ (Chaoshan) and /p t k/ (Dutch) indicate that [t] is the least stably perceived segment overall. It is particularly disfavoured when it follows [a], where there is a bias towards [k]. We argue that this finding supports a perceptual account of the historically documented scenario whereby a change from /at/ to /ak/ preceded and triggered a more general merger of /t/ with /k/ in the coda of Chaoshan. While we grant that perceptual sound changes are not the only or even the most common type of sound change, the fact that the perception results are essentially the same across the three language groups lends credibility to Ohala's perceptually motivated sound changes., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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29. Japanese orthographic complexity and speech duration in a reading task
- Author
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Shannon Grippando
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Speech recognition ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Orthographic projection ,Language and Linguistics ,Psycholinguistics ,Task (project management) ,Japan ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Reading ,Writing system ,Phonetics ,Duration (music) ,Reading (process) ,Humans ,Speech ,Affect (linguistics) ,Psychology ,Orthography ,media_common - Abstract
The number of letters in a word’s orthographic form can affect speech duration. Previous research in this area has been limited to studies of languages with alphabets. The current study expands upon this previous research by investigating effects on speech duration from units of orthographic complexity potentially analogous to letter length in Japanese, a language with a logography. In a modified version of a reading task used in one of the prior studies, native Japanese-speaking participants were audio-recorded reading pairs of homophonous words that varied by: 1) number of pen strokes in a single character; or 2) number of whole characters in their orthographic forms. Two-character words were produced significantly longer than one-character words. No significant effect was found from pen strokes on speech duration. These results are presented as evidence that the orthographic duration effect observed in previous studies is not limited to languages with alphabetic writing systems.
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
30. Acoustic correlates of Burmese voiced and voiceless sonorants.
- Author
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Repetti-Ludlow C
- Subjects
- Humans, Phonetics, Language, Acoustics, Aphonia, Southeast Asian People, Voice
- Abstract
Voiceless sonorant consonants are typologically rare segments, appearing in only a few of the world's languages, including Burmese. In this study, Burmese sonorants and their adjacent vowels are investigated in an attempt to (1) determine what acoustic correlates distinguish voiced and voiceless sonorants and (2) determine whether there are multiple realizations of voiceless sonorants and, if so, establish what acoustic correlates distinguish them. In order to pursue these questions, a production study was carried out and target words were analyzed, demonstrating that Burmese voiceless sonorants have a spread glottis period resulting in turbulent airflow 78 % of the time. Findings from linear mixed-effects models showed that voiced and voiceless sonorants are significantly different in terms of duration of the sonorant, F0 of the sonorant, and strength of excitation measured over the following vowel. A linear discriminant analysis was able to predict voicing category with 86.7 % accuracy, with the duration of the spread glottis period being the best indicator of voicelessness, followed by the cues that were significant in the linear mixed-effects models. In cases when the spread glottis period is absent from voiceless sonorants, the sonorant only has correlates that are associated with voicelessness (such as F0 and strength of excitation) but not correlates that are associated with the spread glottis gesture (such as duration and harmonics-to-noise ratio). These results have implications both for our understanding of the acoustics of Burmese sonorants and for our understanding of voiceless sonorants more generally., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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31. Vowel-internal cues to vowel quality and prominence in speech perception.
- Author
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Steffman J
- Subjects
- Humans, Language, Speech, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Cues, Speech Perception
- Abstract
This study examines how variation in F0 and intensity impacts the perception of American English vowels. Both properties vary intrinsically as a function of vowel features in the speech production literature, raising the question of the perceptual impact of each. In addition to considering listeners' interpretation of either cue as an intrinsic property of the vowel, the possible prominence-marking function of each is considered. Two patterns of prominence strengthening in vowels, sonority expansion and hyperarticulation, are tested in light of recent findings that contextual prominence impacts vowel perception in line with these effects (i.e. a prominent vowel is expected by listeners to be realized as if it had undergone prominence strengthening). Across four vowel contrasts with different height and frontness features, listeners categorized phonetic continua with variation in formants, F0 and intensity. Results show that variation in level F0 height is interpreted as an intrinsic cue by listeners. Higher F0 cues a higher vowel, following intrinsic F0 effects in the production literature. In comparison, intensity is interpreted as a prominence-lending cue, for which effect directionality is dependent on vowel height. Higher intensity high vowels undergo perceptual re-calibration in line with (acoustic) hyperarticulation, whereas higher intensity non-high vowels undergo perceptual re-calibration in line with sonority expansion., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
32. Questioning questions - the perception of f0 scaling in German questions between categorical function and continuous attitude.
- Author
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Michalsky J
- Subjects
- Humans, Semantics, Speech, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Language, Speech Perception
- Abstract
In previous studies comparing the intonation of questions and statements in German, greater f0 excursions of phrase-final rises have been associated with questions in both read speech and spontaneous speech. This holds for production studies as well as perception studies. However, a major question remains whether these differences are perceived categorically or continuously. Furthermore, we ask whether the differences in f0 scaling correspond to categorical linguistic functions or rather an attitudinal continuum. We conducted three different perception experiments: a classical categorical perception task, an imitation task, and a semantic evaluation task. The results suggest that f0 scaling in phrase-final rises is perceived as a phonetic continuum rather than in phonological categories. Furthermore, the gradual increase of the final rise is associated with a gradual increase in perceived questioning . Lastly, the phonetic cues to this degree of questioning are distinct from those to the other investigated meanings surprise and uncertainty . Accordingly, this study supports the assumption that questioning constitutes an attitudinal meaning in its own right., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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33. Phonetic phenomena in New Flamenco. The linguistic stylisation of flamenco over time: a corpus study.
- Author
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Fernández de Molina Ortés E
- Subjects
- Humans, Phonetics, Singing
- Abstract
The aim of this article is to check whether the phenomena that were indexicalised in flamenco singing during the early stages of the professionalisation of singing (seseo, fricatisation, aspiration and elision of sounds, rhotacism) have been preserved over the generations. Above all, we want to know whether these phenomena have survived in this period and in the new varieties of the genre, such as flamenco fusion. For this work we elaborated and transcribed two flamenco corpora from the analysis of 44 h of recordings and a total of 94,978 lemmas with phonetic phenomena. The results have shown that, indeed, in flamenco there are indexical phonetic phenomena that have been registered as representative marks of the cante. In fact, the cantaores themselves, regardless of their origin, use the same sounds. However, a decrease in the use of phonetic phenomena of the genre in New Flamenco has been observed, especially in the younger generations., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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34. Vowel and consonant quantity in two Swiss German dialects and their corresponding varieties of Standard German: effects of region, age, and tempo.
- Author
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Zebe F
- Subjects
- Humans, Switzerland, Time Factors, Medicago sativa, Phonetics, Language
- Abstract
The diglossic situation in German-speaking Switzerland entails that both an Alemannic dialect and a Swiss standard variety of German are spoken. One phonological property of both Alemannic and Swiss Standard German (SSG) is contrastive quantity not only in vowels but also in consonants, namely lenis and fortis. This study aims to compare vowel and plosive closure durations as well as articulation rate (AR) between Alemannic and SSG in the varieties spoken in a rural area of the canton of Lucerne (LU) and an urban area of the canton of Zurich (ZH). In addition to the segment durations, an additional measure of vowel-to-vowel + consonant duration (V/(V + C)) ratios is calculated in order to account for possible compensation between vowel and closure durations. Stimuli consisted of words containing different vowel-consonant (VC) combinations. The main differences found are longer segment durations in Alemannic compared to SSG, three phonetic vowel categories in Alemannic that differ between LU and ZH, three stable V/(V + C) ratio categories, and three phonetic consonant categories lenis, fortis, and extrafortis in both Alemannic and SSG. Most importantly, younger ZH speakers produced overall shorter closure durations, calling into question a possible reduction of consonant categories due to a contact to German Standard German (GSG)., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Edge strengthening and phonetic variability in Spanish /l/: an ultrasound study.
- Author
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Ramsammy M and King M
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech Acoustics, Acoustics, Tongue diagnostic imaging, Phonetics, Language
- Abstract
Previous research has shown that /l/ in Spanish displays patterns of articulatory variability that are determined by a complex interaction of phonetic, phonological and dialectal factors. In this study, we report the results of an experiment using Ultrasound Tongue Imaging (UTI) that tests /l/-articulations in a dialectal cross-section of Spanish speakers. We show that lengthening of /l/ in phrase-edge contexts is accompanied by articulatory distinctions (e.g. root/dorsum retraction) for some speakers, whereas others produce lengthened realisations of /l/ in these contexts without observable differences in tongue position. We also find acoustic evidence for reduction in utterance-medial intervocalic and preconsonantal environments (duration, intensity, F1 frequency measures are discussed). However, articulatory correlates of reduction are not consistently observed across speakers in these contexts. As well as relating the results to prosodically-driven strengthening and reduction patterns, our findings are of relevance to debates about resyllabification in Spanish. Specifically, we argue that our results cannot be straightforwardly accommodated under phonological analysis assuming that word-final consonants regularly resyllabify across word boundaries prevocalically., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Individual differences in attention control and the processing of phonological contrasts in a second language.
- Author
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Mora JC and Darcy I
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Individuality, Language, Phonetics, Attention, Multilingualism, Speech Perception
- Abstract
This study investigated attention control in L2 phonological processing from a cognitive individual differences perspective, to determine its role in predicting phonological acquisition in adult L2 learning. Participants were 21 L1-Spanish learners of English, and 19 L1-English learners of Spanish. Attention control was measured through a novel speech-based attention-switching task. Phonological processing was assessed through a speeded ABX categorization task (perception) and a delayed sentence repetition task (production). Correlational analyses indicated that learners with more efficient attention switching skill and faster speed in correctly identifying the target phonetic features in the speech dimension under focus could perceptually discriminate L2 vowels at higher processing speed, but not at higher accuracy rates. Thus, attentional flexibility provided a processing advantage for difficult L2 contrasts but did not predict the extent to which precise representations for the target L2 vowels had been established. However, attention control was related to L2 learners' ability to distinguish the contrasting L2 vowels in production. In addition, L2 learners' accuracy in perceptually distinguishing between two contrasting vowels was significantly related to how much of a quality distinction between them they could make in production., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Merger in Eivissan Catalan: an acoustic analysis of the vowel systems of young native speakers.
- Author
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Hamann S and Torres-Tamarit F
- Subjects
- Humans, Language, Acoustics, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Speech Perception
- Abstract
The vowel system of Catalan has been the focus of many studies, though work on the varieties spoken on the island of Eivissa (Ibiza) are scarce, with a single mention of the possible merger of the mid back vowels /o, ɔ/ (Torres Torres, Marià. 1983. Aspectes del vocalisme tònic eivissenc. Eivissa 14. 22-23). The present article provides the first acoustic analysis of the vowel inventory of 25 young native speakers of Eivissan Catalan, with a focus on the realisations of stressed /ə, ɛ/, and the back mid vowels /o, ɔ/. We employed Pillai scores (Hay, Jennifer, Paul Warren & Katie Drager. 2006. Factors influencing speech perception in the context of a merger-in-progress. Journal of Phonetics 34. 458-484) to compare the possibly merged pairs /ə, ɛ/ and /o, ɔ/ to the fully-contrasting neighbouring pairs /e, ɛ/ and /o, u/. Our results show that all participants had considerable overlap of stressed /ə/ and /ɛ/, and all but one had considerable overlap of the back mid vowels, while the fully contrastive pairs (/e, ɛ/ and /o, u/) showed almost no overlap., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
38. Word-level prosodic and metrical influences on Hawaiian glottal stop realization.
- Author
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Davidson L and Parker Jones O
- Subjects
- Humans, Hawaii, Phonetics, Cues, Language, Voice
- Abstract
Previous research on the phonetic realization of Hawaiian glottal stops has shown that it can be produced several ways, including with creaky voice, full closure, or modal voice. This study investigates whether the realization is conditioned by word-level prosodic or metrical factors, which would be consistent with research demonstrating that segmental distribution and phonetic realization can be sensitive to word-internal structure. At the same time, it has also been shown that prosodic prominence, such as syllable stress, can affect phonetic realization. Data come from the 1970s-80s radio program Ka Leo Hawai'i. Using Parker Jones' (Parker Jones, Oiwi. 2010. A computational phonology and morphology of Hawaiian . University of Oxford DPhil. thesis) computational prosodic grammar, words were parsed and glottal stops were automatically coded for word position, syllable stress, and prosodic word position. The frequency of the word containing the glottal stop was also calculated. Results show that full glottal closures are more likely at the beginning of a prosodic word, especially in word-medial position. Glottal stops with full closure in lexical word initial position are more likely in lower frequency words. The findings for Hawaiian glottal stop suggest that prosodic prominence does not condition a stronger realization, but rather, the role of the prosodic word is similar to other languages exhibiting phonetic cues to word-level prosodic structure., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
39. Two-part vowel modifications in Child Directed Speech in Warlpiri may enhance child attention to speech and scaffold noun acquisition.
- Author
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Bundgaard-Nielsen RL, O'Shannessy C, Wang Y, Nelson A, Bartlett J, and Davis V
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Phonetics, Australia, Language, Speech Acoustics, Speech, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Study 1 compared vowels in Child Directed Speech (CDS; child ages 25-46 months) to vowels in Adult Directed Speech (ADS) in natural conversation in the Australian Indigenous language Warlpiri, which has three vowels (/i/, /a/, /u). Study 2 compared the vowels of the child interlocutors from Study 1 to caregiver ADS and CDS. Study 1 indicates that Warlpiri CDS vowels are characterised by fronting, /a/-lowering, f
o -raising, and increased duration, but not vowel space expansion. Vowels in CDS nouns, however, show increased between-contrast differentiation and reduced within-contrast variation, similar to what has been reported for other languages. We argue that this two-part CDS modification process serves a dual purpose: Vowel space shifting induces IDS/CDS that sounds more child-like, which may enhance child attention to speech, while increased between-contrast differentiation and reduced within-contrast variation in nouns may serve didactic purposes by providing high-quality information about lexical specifications. Study 2 indicates that Warlpiri CDS vowels are more like child vowels, providing indirect evidence that aspects of CDS may serve non-linguistic purposes simultaneously with other aspects serving linguistic-didactic purposes. The studies have novel implications for the way CDS vowel modifications are considered and highlight the necessity of naturalistic data collection, novel analyses, and typological diversity., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Development of perceptual similarity and discriminability: the perception of Russian phonemes by Chinese learners.
- Author
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Yang Y, Chen S, Chen F, and Ma J
- Subjects
- Humans, East Asian People, Phonetics, Russia, Speech Acoustics, Language, Multilingualism, Speech Perception
- Abstract
This study explored the perceptual assimilation and discrimination of Russian phonemes by three groups of Chinese listeners with differing Russian learning experience. A perceptual assimilation task (PAT) and a perceptual discrimination test (PDT) were conducted to investigate if/how L1-L2 perceptual similarity would vary as a function of increased learning experience, and the development of assimilation-discrimination relations. The PAT was analyzed via assimilation rates, dispersion K' values, goodness ratings and assimilation patterns. Results revealed an intriguing phenomenon that the perceived Mandarin-Russian similarity first increased from naïve listeners to intermediate learners and then decreased slightly in relatively advanced learners. This suggests that L1-L2 perceptual similarity is subject to learning experience and could follow a potential "rise and fall" developmental pattern. The PDT results were mostly in line with the assimilation-discrimination correspondence with more experience bringing out better discriminability in general. Yet the overall sensitivity d' values from the Chinese groups were relatively low, implying acoustic/articulatory effects on L2 discriminability aside from perceptual assimilation. The results were discussed under the frameworks of L2 Perceptual Assimilation Model, Speech Learning Model and L2 Linguistic Perception Model., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
41. Difficulties in decoupling articulatory gestures in L2 phonemic sequences: the case of Mandarin listeners' perceptual deletion of English post-vocalic laterals.
- Author
-
Wang Y, Bundgaard-Nielsen RL, Baker BJ, and Maxwell O
- Subjects
- Humans, Gestures, Language, Phonetics, Vocabulary, Speech Perception, Multilingualism
- Abstract
Nonnative or second language (L2) perception of segmental sequences is often characterised by perceptual modification processes, which may "repair" a nonnative sequence that is phonotactically illegal in the listeners' native language (L1) by transforming the sequence into a sequence that is phonotactically legal in the L1. Often repairs involve the insertion of phonetic materials (epenthesis), but we focus, here, on the less-studied phenomenon of perceptual deletion of nonnative phonemes by testing L1 Mandarin listeners' perception of post-vocalic laterals in L2 English using the triangulating methods of a cross-language goodness rating task, an AXB task, and an AX task. The data were analysed in the framework of the Perceptual Assimilation Model (PAM/PAM-L2), and we further investigated the role of L2 vocabulary size on task performance. The experiments indicate that perceptual deletion occurs when the post-vocalic lateral overlaps with the nucleus vowel in terms of tongue backness specification. In addition, Mandarin listeners' discrimination performance in some contexts was significantly correlated with their English vocabulary size, indicating that continuous growth of vocabulary knowledge can drive perceptual learning of novel L2 segmental sequences and phonotactic structures., (© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2023
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42. Ratree Wayland: Phonetics: a practical introduction.
- Author
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Lin, Dongmei
- Abstract
To give a concrete example, it would have been more logical and easier to follow if the chapter introducing experimental tools in articulatory phonetics (Chapter 11) had been placed right after the chapters on speech articulation (Chapters 1-2). While consonants and vowels have been well defined with respect to their articulatory, acoustic and perceptual characteristics (in Chapter 1, Chapter 8, and Chapter 10, respectively), the phonetic features of suprasegmentals have received much less attention. Keywords: book notice; introductory; phonetics EN book notice introductory phonetics 111 114 04 05/06/22 20220101 NES 220101 Wayland Ratree. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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43. Vowel-to-Vowel Coarticulation in Spanish Nonwords
- Author
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Olga Dmitrieva and Jenna T. Conklin
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Audiology ,Biology ,Speech Acoustics ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Young Adult ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phonetics ,Vowel ,Stress (linguistics) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Coarticulation ,Language ,05 social sciences ,Linguistics ,Middle Aged ,Formant ,Spain ,Mid vowel ,Female ,0305 other medical science - Abstract
The present study examined vowel-to-vowel (VV) coarticulation in backness affecting mid vowels /e/ and /o/ in 36 Spanish nonwords produced by 20 native speakers of Spanish, aged 19–50 years (mean = 30.7; SD = 8.2). Examination of second formant frequency showed substantial carryover coarticulation throughout the data set, while anticipatory coarticulation was minimal and of shorter duration. Furthermore, the effect of stress on vowel-to-vowel coarticulation was investigated and found to vary by direction. In the anticipatory direction, small coarticulatory changes were relatively stable regardless of stress, particularly for target /e/, while in the carryover direction, a hierarchy of stress emerged wherein the greatest coarticulation occurred between stressed triggers and unstressed targets, less coarticulation was observed between unstressed triggers and unstressed targets, and the least coarticulation occurred between unstressed triggers with stressed targets. The results of the study augment and refine previously available knowledge about vowel-to-vowel coarticulation in Spanish and expand cross-linguistic understanding of the effect of stress on the magnitude and direction of vowel-to-vowel coarticulation.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Deconstructing Heritage Language Dominance: Effects of Proficiency, Use, and Input on Heritage Speakers’ Production of the Spanish Alveolar Tap
- Author
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Gemma Repiso Puigdelliura and Ji Young Kim
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,05 social sciences ,Multilingualism ,Speech Acoustics ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dominance (ethology) ,Tongue ,Phonetics ,Heritage language ,Mixed effects ,Humans ,Production (economics) ,Female ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Language - Abstract
This study considers language dominance as a composite of proficiency, use, and input, and examines how these constructs in Spanish influence heritage speakers’ production of Spanish alveolar taps. Two aspects of Spanish tap production were examined: lingual constriction rates and the degree of lingual constriction. Multiple measures associated with Spanish proficiency, use, and input were reduced to a smaller number of dimensions using principal component analysis, and the effects of the components on heritage speakers’ tap production were analyzed using mixed effects modeling. The overall findings suggest that dominance in Spanish may not have an effect on the degree of lingual constriction of heritage speakers’ taps, but it does have an effect on how frequently heritage speakers produce taps with lingual constriction. Spanish use and input were found to be the main contributors to heritage speakers’ target-like production of taps.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Nasal Coarticulation and Prosody in Kakataibo
- Author
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Roberto Zariquiey, Heriberto Avelino, and Jorge iván Pérez-Silva
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Linguistics and Language ,Adolescent ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Speech recognition ,Language and Linguistics ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phonetics ,Peru ,Stress (linguistics) ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Speech ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Prosody ,Coarticulation ,Aged ,Language ,Nasality ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,respiratory system ,Female ,Nasal Cavity ,Syllable ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
This paper presents the first phonetic description of the patterns of nasal coarticulation in Kakataibo. While closely related Panoan languages have been described as having anticipatory nasal coarticulation in VN sequences, there are only a few reports of other types of nasal coarticulation. Based on a detailed investigation of the aerodynamic properties of nasality, we account for the full variety of nasal coarticulation patterns in Kakataibo and discuss their interaction with prosody. This paper shows that nasal coarticulation occurs in all contexts in which there is vowel-nasal contiguity, although the amount and patterns of nasal coarticulation are dependent on the directionality of the process, the presence or absence of a syllable boundary and stress.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. J.M. Levis, Intelligibility, Oral Communication, and the Teaching of Pronunciation , Cambridge Applied Linguistics Series, Vol. 27, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2018
- Author
-
Oliver Niebuhr
- Subjects
intelligibility ,Linguistics and Language ,second-language teaching ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,phonetics ,Phonetics ,Phonology ,Applied linguistics ,L2 ,Pronunciation ,Intelligibility (communication) ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,Comprehension ,foreign accent ,phonology ,prosody ,Language education ,comprehension ,Prosody ,Psychology - Abstract
Globalization has had many notable effects on communication in the past decades. Two of them are: firstly, that English has become a major lingua franca for conducting business, gaining education, and engaging in social interaction; and secondly, that in these communication situations, "many, if not most, interactions in English around the world take place without the involvement of a native speaker" (p.3). Furthermore, compared to other levels of language such as syntax and morphology, pronunciation is, according to most empirical evidence, the make-it-or-break-it factor when it comes to informationally and socially successful conversations among non-native (L2) speakers of English as well as between L2 speakers and native (L1) speakers. In other words, globalization of economics and the media have given a new meaning to the research and teaching of phonological and phonetic issues. It is against this background that the monograph of John M. Levis was written. With a focus on English, its chapters are built around questions like How should the fact that most oral communication in the world today takes place between L2 speakers shape the research and training of phonological and phonetic issues? How can we determine the relative importance of segmental and prosodic features for speech intelligibility and, thus, better decide which features should be given priority in L2 teaching? And to what extent should these decisions take into account contextual, situational, stylistic, and linguistic variables?
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- 2019
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47. Joaquín Romero and María Riera The Phonetics-Phonology Interface. Representations and methodologies
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Karolina Bros
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Linguistics and Language ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Interface (Java) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Phonetics ,Phonology ,Art ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,media_common - Published
- 2019
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48. Weak Lips? A Possible Merger of /i:/ and /y:/ in Gothenburg
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Johan Gross and Julia Forsberg
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Male ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Linguistics and Language ,Adolescent ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Speech recognition ,Speech Acoustics ,Language and Linguistics ,Young Adult ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phonetics ,Vowel ,Perception ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Active listening ,Language ,media_common ,Mathematics ,Sweden ,Rounding ,05 social sciences ,Distinctive feature ,Feature (linguistics) ,Formant ,Educational Status ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Word (group theory) - Abstract
Background/Aims: This study investigates a possible merger in the early stages between /i:/ and /y:/ among young speakers in Gothenburg, Sweden. Methods: (1) A large-scale online perception experiment testing listeners’ abilities to identify the two vowels and (2) acoustic analysis of 705 vowels from 19 speakers. Results: The perception study shows that listeners classify the horizontally centralized /y:/ as /i:/, both in isolated vowel items and in items containing the full word. This indicates that /y:/ is moving into the perceptual space of /i:/. Listeners also classify the unmerged /y:/ as /i:/ when listening to [y:] in isolation, indicating that lip rounding is a perceptually weak feature, for this centralized vowel, in this variety. The acoustic analysis shows that /i:/ tends to be produced as [ɨ:], and that there is no acoustic difference between /i:/ and /y:/ in measurements correlated with the first two formants, i.e. lip rounding is the most important distinctive feature. Conclusion: Results point in the direction of an incipient vowel merger, following a merger-by-approximation model. These results indicate a lack of perceptual strength of an articulatory feature in the disappearing phoneme, namely lip rounding, and the consequent perceptual similarities between the horizontally centralized [ɨ:] and /y:/.
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- 2019
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49. The Goldilocks Zone of Perceptual Learning
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Brianne Senior, Charlotte Vaughn, Carolyn Norton, Molly Babel, and Michael McAuliffe
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Male ,Auditory perception ,Linguistics and Language ,Vocabulary ,Speech perception ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Lexical item ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Phonetics ,Perceptual learning ,Humans ,Learning ,Speech ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Variation (linguistics) ,Categorization ,Auditory Perception ,Speech Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Background/Aims: Lexically guided perceptual learning in speech is the updating of linguistic categories based on novel input disambiguated by the structure provided in a recognized lexical item. We test the range of variation that allows for perceptual learning by presenting listeners with items that vary from subtle within-category variation to fully remapped cross-category variation. Methods: Experiment 1 uses a lexically guided perceptual learning paradigm with words containing noncanonical /s/ realizations from s/ʃ continua that correspond to “typical,” “ambiguous,” “atypical,” and “remapped” steps. Perceptual learning is tested in an s/ʃ categorization task. Experiment 2 addresses listener sensitivity to variation in the exposure items using AX discrimination tasks. Results: Listeners in experiment 1 showed perceptual learning with the maximally ambiguous tokens. Performance of listeners in experiment 2 suggests that tokens which showed the most perceptual learning were not perceptually salient on their own. Conclusion: These results demonstrate that perceptual learning is enhanced with maximally ambiguous stimuli. Excessively atypical pronunciations show attenuated perceptual learning, while typical pronunciations show no evidence for perceptual learning. AX discrimination illustrates that the maximally ambiguous stimuli are not perceptually unique. Together, these results suggest that perceptual learning relies on an interplay between confidence in phonetic and lexical predictions and category typicality.
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- 2019
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50. Language Specificity in Phonetic Cue Weighting: Monolingual and Bilingual Perception of the Stop Voicing Contrast in English and Spanish
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Andrew J. Lotto, Jessamyn Schertz, and Kathy M. Carbonell
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Adult ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Multilingualism ,Audiology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Young Adult ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Closure duration ,Phonetics ,Vowel ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Speech ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Language ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Voice-onset time ,Contrast (statistics) ,Weighting ,Logistic Models ,Formant ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Voice ,Cues ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
Background/Aims:This work examines the perception of the stop voicing contrast in Spanish and English along four acoustic dimensions, comparing monolingual and bilingual listeners. Our primary goals are to test the extent to which cue-weighting strategies are language-specific in monolinguals, and whether this language specificity extends to bilingual listeners.Methods:Participants categorized sounds varying in voice onset time (VOT, the primary cue to the contrast) and three secondary cues: fundamental frequency at vowel onset, first formant (F1) onset frequency, and stop closure duration. Listeners heard acoustically identical target stimuli, within language-specific carrier phrases, in English and Spanish modes.Results:While all listener groups used all cues, monolingual English listeners relied more on F1, and less on closure duration, than monolingual Spanish listeners, indicating language specificity in cue use. Early bilingual listeners used the three secondary cues similarly in English and Spanish, despite showing language-specific VOT boundaries.Conclusion:While our findings reinforce previous work demonstrating language-specific phonetic representations in bilinguals in terms of VOT boundary, they suggest that this specificity may not extend straightforwardly to cue-weighting strategies.
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- 2019
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