journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37897248/processing-of-english-coda-laterals-in-l2-listeners-an-eye-tracking-study
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yizhou Wang
This study explores speech processing of English coda laterals (dark L's) in second language (L2) listeners whose native language does not permit laterals at syllable coda positions. We tested L2 listeners' (native Mandarin) perception of coda laterals following three Australian English vowels differing in phonological backness, including /iː/, /ʉː/, and /oː/, which represent a front vowel, and central vowel, and a back vowel, respectively. L2 listeners first completed an AX task which tested their ability to discriminate between /iː/-/iːl/, /ʉː/-/ʉːl/, and /oː/-/oːl/, and then they completed an identification task with eye-tracking which tested their ability to distinguish vowel-lateral sequences and bare vowel categories using explicit phonological-orthographical labels...
October 28, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37830332/sensorimotor-adaptation-to-formant-shifted-auditory-feedback-is-predicted-by-language-specific-factors-in-l1-and-l2-speech-production
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiao Cai, Mingkun Ouyang, Yulong Yin, Qingfang Zhang
Auditory feedback plays an important role in the long-term updating and maintenance of speech motor control; thus, the current study explored the unresolved question of how sensorimotor adaptation is predicted by language-specific and domain-general factors in first-language (L1) and second-language (L2) production. Eighteen English-L1 speakers and 22 English-L2 speakers performed the same sensorimotor adaptation experiments and tasks, which measured language-specific and domain-general abilities. The experiment manipulated the language groups (English-L1 and English-L2) and experimental conditions (baseline, early adaptation, late adaptation, and end)...
October 13, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37830314/sociophonetic-variation-in-vowel-categorization-of-australian-english
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Debbie Loakes, Josh Clothier, John Hajek, Janet Fletcher
This study involves a perceptual categorization task for Australian English, designed to investigate regional and social variation in category boundaries between close-front vowel contrasts. Data are from four locations in southeast Australia. A total of 81 listeners from two listener groups took part: (a) so-called mainstream Australian English listeners from all four locations, and (b) L1 Aboriginal English listeners from one of the locations. Listeners heard front vowels /ɪ e æ/ arranged in 7-step continua presented at random...
October 13, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37772604/how-complex-verbs-acquire-their-idiosyncratic-meanings
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sergei Monakhov
Complex verbs with the same preverb/prefix/particle that is both linguistically productive and analyzable can be compositional as well as non-compositional in meaning. For example, the English on has compositional spatial uses ( put a hat on ) but also a non-spatial "continuative" use, where its semantic contribution is consistent with multiple verbs ( we played / worked / talked on despite the interruption ). Comparable examples can be given with German preverbs or Russian prefixes, which are the main data analyzed in the present paper...
September 29, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37772514/social-priming-exploring-the-effects-of-speaker-race-and-ethnicity-on-perception-of-second-language-accents
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Drew J McLaughlin, Kristin J Van Engen
Listeners use more than just acoustic information when processing speech. Social information, such as a speaker's perceived race or ethnicity, can also affect the processing of the speech signal, in some cases facilitating perception ("social priming"). We aimed to replicate and extend this line of inquiry, examining effects of multiple social primes (i.e., a Middle Eastern, White, or East Asian face, or a control silhouette image) on the perception of Mandarin Chinese-accented English and Arabic-accented English...
September 29, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37737045/often-overlooked-aspects-of-sound-symbolism-the-influence-of-participants-characteristics-on-size-ratings
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
László Kovács, Renáta Németh, Hilke Elsen
Sound symbolism is a non-arbitrary mapping between phonetic properties and meanings. The existence and nature of sound symbolism have long been the subject of empirical research. It is rarely recognized, however, that participants' intrinsic characteristics (e.g., age, gender, language knowledge), in addition to the commonly studied phonetic features, may also influence size ratings. Our study aims to empirically investigate the impact of participant-specific characteristics on size ratings: It also aims to examine whether these characteristics have a direct impact when considering the impact of phonetic features or they rather modify the effects of phonetic features...
September 22, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37712512/the-effect-of-distributional-restrictions-in-speech-perception-a-case-study-from-korean-and-taiwanese-southern-min
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jiwon Hwang, Yu-An Lu
In Korean, voiced oral stops can occur intervocalically as allophones of their voiceless lenis counterparts; they can also occur initially as variants of nasal stops as a result of initial denasalization (e.g., /motu/→[ b o d u] "all"). However, neither [ŋ] nor [ɡ] (the denasalized variant of the velar nasal) is allowed in the initial position due to the phonotactic restriction against initial [ŋ] in Korean. Given the distribution of nasal and voiced stops in Korean, this study draws on the idea of cue informativeness, exploring (a) whether Korean listeners' attention to nasality and voicing cues is based on the distributional characteristics of nasal and voiced stops, and (b) whether their attention can be generalized across different places of articulation without such linguistic experience...
September 15, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37555541/the-effect-of-habitual-speech-rate-on-speaker-specific-processing-in-english-stop-voicing-perception
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Connie Ting, Yoonjung Kang
This study investigates listeners' ability to track individual speakers' habitual speech rate in a dialogue and adjust their perception of durational contrasts. Previous studies that found such adjustments are inconclusive as adjustments can be attributed to exemplars of target structures in the dialogue rather than perceptual calibration of habitual speech rates. In this study, English listeners were presented with a dialogue between a fast and slow speaker, containing no stressed syllable-initial voiceless stops...
August 9, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37528758/phonetic-dissimilarity-and-l2-category-formation-in-l2-accommodation
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Grace Wenling Cao
Many studies of speech accommodation focus on native speakers with different dialects, whereas only a limited number of studies work on L2 speakers' accommodation and discuss theories for second language (L2) accommodation. This paper aimed to fill the theoretical gap by integrating the revised speech learning model (SLM) with the exemplar-based models for L2 speech accommodation. A total of 19 Cantonese-English bilingual speakers completed map tasks with English speakers of Received Pronunciation and General American English in two separate experiments...
August 2, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37522627/phrasal-synchronization-of-gesture-with-prosody-and-information-structure
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Olcay Türk, Sasha Calhoun
This study investigates the synchronization of manual gestures with prosody and information structure using Turkish natural speech data. Prosody has long been linked to gesture as a key driver of gesture-speech synchronization. Gesture has a hierarchical phrasal structure similar to prosody. At the lowest level, gesture has been shown to be synchronized with prosody (e.g., apexes and pitch accents). However, less is known about higher levels. Even less is known about timing relationships with information structure, though this is signaled by prosody and linked to gesture...
July 31, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37522157/language-contact-within-the-speaker-phonetic-variation-and-crosslinguistic-influence
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Khia A Johnson, Molly Babel
A recent model of sound change posits that the direction of change is determined, at least in part, by the distribution of variation within speech communities. We explore this model in the context of bilingual speech, asking whether the less variable language constrains phonetic variation in the more variable language, using a corpus of spontaneous speech from early Cantonese-English bilinguals. As predicted, given the phonetic distributions of stop obstruents in Cantonese compared with English, intervocalic English /b d g/ were produced with less voicing for Cantonese-English bilinguals and word-final English /t k/ were more likely to be unreleased compared with spontaneous speech from two monolingual English control corpora...
July 31, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37496274/phonological-well-formedness-constraints-in-mandarin-phonotactics-evidence-from-lexical-decision
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shuxiao Gong, Jie Zhang, Robert Fiorentino
This article investigates the role of phonological well-formedness constraints in Mandarin speakers' phonotactic grammar and how they affect online speech processing. Mandarin non-words can be categorized into systematic gaps and accidental gaps, depending on whether they violate principled phonotactic constraints based on the Obligatory Contour Principle (OCP). Non-word acceptability judgment experiments have shown that systematic gaps received lower wordlikeness ratings than accidental gaps. Using a lexical decision task, this study found that systematic gaps were rejected significantly faster than accidental gaps, even after lexical statistics were taken into account...
July 26, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37403367/the-syntactic-pasts-of-nouns-shape-their-prosodic-future-lexico-syntactic-effects-on-position-and-duration
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas A Lester, Argyro Katsika
Phrasal prosody is often viewed as a level of linguistic representation at which the phonetic profile of an utterance varies independently of the lexical items it contains. For example, the same word, when produced at the edges of prosodic phrases, will take longer to produce than when it is produced within the edges of a phrase. Lengthening effects have also been found for words when placed in different syntactic or lexical contexts. Recent evidence suggests that lexico-syntactic information-for example, the global syntactic distributions of words-affects phonetic duration in production, irrespective of other factors...
July 4, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37401753/bilingual-children-shift-and-relax-second-language-phoneme-categorization-in-response-to-accented-l2-and-native-l1-speech-exposure
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margarethe McDonald, Margarita Kaushanskaya
Listeners adjust their perception to match that of presented speech through shifting and relaxation of categorical boundaries. This allows for processing of speech variation, but may be detrimental to processing efficiency. Bilingual children are exposed to many types of speech in their linguistic environment, including native and non-native speech. This study examined how first language (L1) Spanish/second language (L2) English bilingual children shifted and relaxed phoneme categorization along the cue of voice onset time (VOT) during English speech processing after three types of language exposure: native English exposure, native Spanish exposure, and Spanish-accented English exposure...
July 4, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37317824/a-corpus-study-on-the-difference-of-turn-taking-in-online-audio-online-video-and-face-to-face-conversation
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ying Tian, Siyun Liu, Jianying Wang
Daily conversation is usually face-to-face and characterized by rapid and fluent exchange of turns between interlocutors. With the need to communicate across long distances, advances in communication media, online audio communication, and online video communication have become convenient alternatives for an increasing number of people. However, the fluency of turn-taking may be influenced when people communicate using these different modes. In this study, we conducted a corpus analysis of face-to-face, online audio, and online video conversations collected from the internet...
June 15, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37313985/kinect-ing-the-dots-using-motion-capture-technology-to-distinguish-sign-language-linguistic-from-gestural-expressions
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rose Stamp, David Cohen, Hagit Hel-Or, Wendy Sandler
Just as vocalization proceeds in a continuous stream in speech, so too do movements of the hands, face, and body in sign languages. Here, we use motion-capture technology to distinguish lexical signs in sign language from other common types of expression in the signing stream. One type of expression is constructed action , the enactment of (aspects of) referents and events by (parts of) the body. Another is classifier constructions , the manual representation of analogue and gradient motions and locations simultaneously with specified referent morphemes...
June 14, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37300416/elliptical-responses-to-direct-and-indirect-requests-for-information
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katherine Chia, Michael P Kaschak
We present two studies examining the factors that lead speakers to produce elliptical responses to requests for information. Following Clark and Levelt and Kelter, experimenters called businesses and asked about their closing time (e.g., Can you tell me what time you close? ). Participants provided the requested information in full sentence responses ( We close at 9 ) or elliptical responses ( At 9 ). A reanalysis of data from previous experiments using this paradigm shows that participants are more likely to produce an elliptical response when the question is a direct request for information ( What time do you close? ) than when the question is an indirect request for information ( Can you tell me what time you close? )...
June 10, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37277996/bridging-inferences-and-reference-management-evidence-from-an-experimental-investigation-in-catalan-and-russian
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daria Seres, Joan Borràs-Comes, M Teresa Espinal
This article focuses on the choice of nominal forms in a language with articles (Catalan) in comparison to a language without articles (Russian). An experimental study (consisting of various naturalness judgment tasks) was run with speakers of these two languages which allowed to show that in bridging contexts native speakers' preferences vary when reference is made to one single individual or to two disjoint referents. In the former case, Catalan speakers chose (in)definite NPs depending on their accessibility to contextual information that guarantees a unique interpretation (or the lack of it) for the entity referred to...
June 5, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37161351/disentangling-the-role-of-biphone-probability-from-neighborhood-density-in-the-perception-of-nonwords
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeremy Steffman, Megha Sundara
In six experiments we explored how biphone probability and lexical neighborhood density influence listeners' categorization of vowels embedded in nonword sequences. We found independent effects of each. Listeners shifted categorization of a phonetic continuum to create a higher probability sequence, even when neighborhood density was controlled. Similarly, listeners shifted categorization to create a nonword from a denser neighborhood, even when biphone probability was controlled. Next, using a visual world eye-tracking task, we determined that biphone probability information is used rapidly by listeners in perception...
May 9, 2023: Language and Speech
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37161280/adaptation-at-the-syntax-semantics-interface-evidence-from-a-vernacular-structure
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Frances Blanchette, Erin Flannery, Carrie Jackson, Paul Reed
Expanding on psycholinguistic research on linguistic adaptation, the phenomenon whereby speakers change how they comprehend or produce structures as a result of cumulative exposure to less frequent or unfamiliar linguistic structures, this study asked whether speakers can learn semantic and syntactic properties of the American English vernacular negative auxiliary inversion (NAI) structure (e.g., didn't everybody eat , meaning "not everybody ate") during the course of an experiment. Formal theoretical analyses of NAI informed the design of a task in which American English-speaking participants unfamiliar with this structure were exposed to NAI sentences in either semantically ambiguous or unambiguous contexts...
May 9, 2023: Language and Speech
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