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1
THE USE OF SEGMENTAL AND SUPRASEGMENTAL INFORMATION IN LEXICAL ACCESS: A FIRST- AND SECOND-LANGUAGE CHINESE INVESTIGATION
Connell, Katrina S.. - : University of Kansas, 2017
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2
Observing the contribution of both underlying and surface representations: Evidence from priming and event-related potentials
Chien, Yu-Fu. - : University of Kansas, 2016
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3
The nature of variation in tone sandhi patterns of Shanghai and Wuxi Wu
Yan, Hanbo. - : University of Kansas, 2016
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4
The productivity of tone sandhi patterns in Wuxi Chinese
Yan, Hanbo. - : University of Kansas, 2013
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5
Effects of variance and input distribution on the training of L2 learners' tone categorization
Liu, Jiang. - : University of Kansas, 2013
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6
Durational Properties of Lexical Stress and Grammatical Stress in Nanchang Chinese and Their Implications for Tonal Contrasts
Liu, Jiang. - : University of Kansas, 2011
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7
An acoustic and aerodynamic study of stops in tonal and non-tonal dialects of Korean
Lee, Hyunjung. - : University of Kansas, 2010
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8
The Effects of Speaking Rate on Mandarin Tones
Stockton, Yun H.. - : University of Kansas, 2008
Abstract: This study examined the acoustic changes of speaking rate on Mandarin tones. 8 native Mandarin speakers produced 17 Chinese words with four tones at slow, normal and fast speaking rate. Acoustic parameters, such as consonant and vowel duration, F0 at onset and offset of vowels and the first, second and third formant frequencies were examined. The ΔF0 and the Turning Point of Tones 2 and 3 were also examined. Results showed significant changes in duration in both consonant and vowels as a function of speaking rate. The findings showed that the vowel duration of a shorter tone, such as tone 4 increases relatively more than a longer tone, such as tone 3 at a slower speaking rate. Results also found that the values of F0 at vowel onset and offset varied as a function of speaking rate. Formant frequency values showed little change when all the stimuli were examined. When the front and back vowels were analyzed separately, F2 values did show significant variations when speaking rate changed. F2 values of front vowels decreased and F2 values of back vowels increased, with an increase in speaking rate. In terms of ΔF0 and TP of Tones 2 and 3, the results showed changes across speaking rate, with a decrease in ΔF0 and an earlier TP as speaking rate increases. These effects were most prominent for Tone 3. These findings are interpreted in terms of how tones are implemented under different speaking rates in production.
Keyword: Chinese language-- tone; Language; linguistics
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1808/4067
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:2398
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9
The effects of duration and sonority on contour tone distribution : a typological survey and formal analysis
Zhang, Jie. - New York [u.a.] : Routledge, 2002
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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10
The Effects of Duration and Sonority on Contour Tone Distribution--Typological Survey and Formal Analysis
Zhang, Jie. - 2001
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