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81
"Que se use el andaluz y que se use siempre" - los rasgos fonéticos y fonológicos andaluces y sus repercusiones en el habla de los locutores de la televisión andaluza
Weinreich, Anna. - 2018
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82
Die Aussprache englischer Lehnwörter im Spanischen
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83
Lieben oder leben? Diskrimination des deutschen /iː/-/eː/-Vokalkontrasts durch Hörer/innen mit L1 Japanisch
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84
Aspects of Kusaal grammar - the syntax-information structure interface
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85
Le varietà regionali dell’italiano: l’italiano parlato in Emilia
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86
Spoken Word Recognition in Native and Second Language Canadian French: Phonetic Detail and Representation of Vowel Nasalization
Desmeules-Trudel, Félix. - : Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2018
Abstract: Research has shown that fine-grained consonantal phonetic information can be gradiently integrated during spoken word recognition in the L1. However, the way listeners categorize vocalic phonetic information has not been investigated as thoroughly. Furthermore, second language (L2) listeners’ processing of fine-grained information is not as well known as L1 processing. L1 Canadian French (CF) listeners and L2 listeners (native English) were tested in an eye tracking paradigm with words containing partially nasalized (CVN) and fully nasal (CṼ) vowels. Stimuli were designed to have variable nasalization duration on the vowel, and sometimes include a short nasal consonant word-finally. The main goals were to determine how nasalization duration influences word recognition in an L1 and an L2, and if variations in phonetic details are gradiently or categorically integrated. Results show that L1 listeners gradiently were able to identify the stimuli when they contained mismatching phonetic cues, while L2 listeners display more categorical patterns of recognition. When stimuli do not have conflicting phonetic cues, L1 listeners mostly identify words as CṼ, except when the vowel is not nasalized. For L2 listeners, the pattern was similar, but the rate of stimuli identification as phonological nasal (CṼ) was lower due to L1 transfer. These results support the hypothesis that L1 listeners have phonological representations that include fine-grained phonetic information and that they consider it when recognizing words. On the other hand, L2 listeners who have less experience in the L2 display more categorical recognition patterns, probably because their representations include coarser phonetic information or because they cannot access fine-grained representations, given the cognitive demands of L2 processing. When words do not contain conflicting phonetic cues, patterns of recognition of both L1 and L2 listeners seem more categorical, even though L2 listeners displayed lower rates of identification than L1 listeners overall. This uncertainty can also be due to less detailed phonological representations or to their inability to access all the necessary information to recognize words. Overall, these results suggest that fine-grained phonetic information gradiently impacts word recognition, that it is part of phono-lexical representations, and that L2 processing is qualitatively and quantitatively different from L1 processing.
Keyword: Canadian French; Phonetics-phonology interface; Second language; Speech perception; Spoken word recognition; Vowel nasalization
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10393/37958
https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-22216
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87
/tɹ/ and /dɹ/ in North American English: Phonologization of a Coarticulatory Effect
Magloughlin, Lyra. - : Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2018
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88
An acoustic study of Canadian raising in three dialects of North American English
Onosson, D. Sky. - 2018
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89
A aquisiçao de língua materna e nao materna: Questoes gerais e dados do Português
Santos, Ana Lúcia; Freitas, Maria Joao. - Berlin : Language Science Press, 2017
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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90
Tonal Placement in Tashlhiyt : How an intonation system accommodates to adverse phonological environments
Roettger, Timo B.. - Berlin : Language Science Press, 2017
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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91
Features in Phonology and Phonetics. Posthumous Writings by Nick Clements and Coauthors
Rialland, Annie (Hrsg.); Ridouane, Rachid (Hrsg.); Hulst, Harry van der (Hrsg.). - Berlin; Boston, Mass. : de Gruyter, 2017
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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92
Minimizing transfer : including Spanish phonetics and phonology in curricula for beginner and intermediate university students of Spanish.
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93
Tone Sequences in Lexical Processing of Beijing Mandarin
Lin, Isabelle. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2017
In: Lin, Isabelle. (2017). Tone Sequences in Lexical Processing of Beijing Mandarin. UCLA: Linguistics 0510. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/030998m7 (2017)
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94
Word Prosody and Intonation of Sgaw Karen
West, Luke Alexander. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2017
In: West, Luke Alexander. (2017). Word Prosody and Intonation of Sgaw Karen. UCLA: Linguistics 0510. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1mv5w5rc (2017)
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95
Articulatory analysis of palatalised rhotics in Russian ... : implications for sound change ...
Stoll, Taja. - : Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 2017
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96
Learning foreign and native accents: the role of production and listening ...
Grohe, Ann-Kathrin. - : Universität Tübingen, 2017
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97
Cross-language forced alignment to assist community-based linguistics for low resource languages
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98
Sounding out Sonority
Parker, Steve. - 2017
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99
The phonetics and phonology of the Lopit language
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100
Contrast preservation and constraints on individual phonetic variation
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