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1
Adult listeners' processing of indexical versus linguistic differences in a pre-attentive discrimination paradigm
Dadwani, Rozmin (R18411); Peter, Varghese (R17407); Chládková, Kateřina. - : U.K., University of Glasgow, 2015
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2
More vowels are not always better : Australian English and Peruvian Spanish learners' comparable perception of Dutch vowels
Alispahic, Samra (R18016); Escudero, Paola (R16636); Mulak, Karen E. (R18007). - : U.S., Cascadilla Press, 2015
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3
Second Language Speech: Theory and Practice
Colantoni, Laura; Steele, Jeffrey; Escudero, Paola (R16636). - : U.K., Cambridge University Press, 2015
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4
Passive distributional learning of non-native vowel contrasts does not work for all listeners
Terry, Josephine A. (S25954); Ong, Jia (S31400); Escudero, Paola (R16636). - : U.K., University of Glasgow, 2015
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5
Mandarin listeners can learn non-native lexical tones through distributional learning
Ong, Jia (S31400); Burnham, Denis K. (R7357); Escudero, Paola (R16636). - : U.K., University of Glasgow, 2015
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6
Listeners cope with speaker and accent variation differently : evidence from the Go/No-go task
Kriengwatana, Buddhamas; Escudero, Paola (R16636); Terry, Josephine A. (S25954). - : Canberra, A.C.T., Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association, 2014
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7
Acoustic distance explains speaker versus accent normalization in infancy
Escudero, Paola (R16636); Mulak, Karen E. (R18007); Alispahic, Samra (R18016). - : Canberra, A.C.T., Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association, 2014
Abstract: Acoustic/phonetic differences exist in cross-speaker and crossaccent speech. Young infants generally recognize speech across speakers but not across speakers of different accents. We examined how Australian English infants discriminated Dutch vowels produced by two speakers of the same accent, and by two speakers of two different accents. Acoustic analysis showed that the acoustic distance between samevowel tokens produced by speakers of different accents was larger than between those produced by speakers of the same accent. Infants demonstrated greater difference in looking time to an accent than a speaker change, indicating that they noticed a difference in a vowel produced in a different accent more than one produced by another speaker with the same accent. This supports the hypothesis that acoustic distance underlies the relative ease in handling speaker versus accent variation.
Keyword: 200404 - Laboratory Phonetics and Speech Science; 970120 - Expanding Knowledge in Languages; Communication and Culture; Dutch language; English language; speech perception; variation; vowels
URL: http://www.nzilbb.canterbury.ac.nz/SST.shtml
http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:29172
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8
Language experience modulates weighting of acoustic cues for vowel perception : an event-related potential study
Lipski, Silvia C.; Escudero, Paola (R16636); Benders, Titia (S30791). - : U.S.A., Wiley, 2012
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9
Native dialect influences second-language vowel perception : Peruvian versus Iberian Spanish learners of Dutch
Escudero, Paola (R16636); Williams, Daniel. - : U.S.A., American Institute of Physics, 2012
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10
Comparing vowel perception and production in Spanish and Portuguese : European versus Latin American dialects
Chládková, Kateřina; Escudero, Paola (R16636). - : U.S.A., Acoustical Society of America, 2012
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11
The interrelation between acoustic context effects and available response categories in speech sound categorization
Benders, Titia; Escudero, Paola (R16636); Sjerpa, Matthias. - : U.S.A., Acoustical Society of America, 2012
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