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My English sounds better than yours: Second-language learners perceive their own accent as better than that of their peers
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In: PLOS One (2020)
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The Role of Segmental Information in Syntactic Processing Through the Syntax–Prosody Interface ...
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The Role of Segmental Information in Syntactic Processing Through the Syntax–Prosody Interface ...
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sj-pdf-1-las-10.1177_0023830920974401 – Supplemental material for The Role of Segmental Information in Syntactic Processing Through the Syntax–Prosody Interface ...
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sj-pdf-1-las-10.1177_0023830920974401 – Supplemental material for The Role of Segmental Information in Syntactic Processing Through the Syntax–Prosody Interface ...
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My English sounds better than yours: Second-language learners perceive their own accent as better than that of their peers
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Datasets on the production and perception of underlying and epenthetic glottal stops in Maltese
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Abstract:
This article provides some supplementary analysis data of speech production and perception of glottal stops in the Semitic language Maltese. In Maltese, a glottal stop can occur as a phoneme, but also as a phonetic marker of vowel-initial words (as in the case with Germanic languages like English). Data from four experiments are provided, which will allow other researchers to reproduce the results and apply their own data-analysis techniques to these data for further data exploration. A production experiment (Experiment 1) investigates how often the glottal marking of vowel-initial words occurs (causing vowel-initial words to be ambiguous with words starting with a glottal stop as a phoneme) and whether the glottal gesture for this marking can be differentiated from an underlying (phonemic) glottal stop in its acoustic properties. Experiments 2 to 4 investigate how and to what extent Maltese listeners perceive glottal markings as lexical (phonemic) or epenthetic (phonetic), using a two-alternative forced choice task (Experiment 2), a visual-world eye tracking task with printed target words (Experiment 3) and a gating task (Experiment 4). A full account of theoretical consequences of these data can be found in the full length article entitled “The glottal stop between segmental and suprasegmental processing: The case of Maltese” [1].
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Keyword:
Linguistics
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32346575 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2020.105543 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7178479/
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The singleton-geminate distinction can be rate dependent: Evidence from Maltese
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 9, No 1 (2018); 6 ; 1868-6354 (2018)
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A time course of prosodic modulation in phonological inferencing: The case of Korean post-obstruent tensing
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Surface forms trump underlying representations in functional generalisations in speech perception: the case of German devoiced stops ...
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Surface forms trump underlying representations in functional generalisations in speech perception: the case of German devoiced stops ...
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How does cognitive load influence speech perception? : An encoding hypothesis
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Phonetic category recalibration : What are the categories? ...
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Phonetic category recalibration : What are the categories? ...
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