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Improvements to vowel categorization in non-native regional accents resulting from multiple- versus single-talker training : a computational approach
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Effects of short-term exposure to unfamiliar regional accents : Australians’ categorization of London and Yorkshire English consonants
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Articulatory basis of the apical/laminal distinction : tongue tip/body coordination in the Wubuy 4-way coronal stop contrast
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Exploring nonlinear relationships between speech face motion and tongue movements using Mutual Information
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Phonetic influences on English and French listeners' assimilation of Mandarin tones to native prosodic categories
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Infant perceptual development for faces and spoken words : an integrated approach
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Influence of phonological, morphological, and prosodic factors on phoneme detection by native and second-language adults
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Coordination of tongue tip and body in place differences among English coronal obstruents
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Abstract:
Using electromagnetometry tracking of the tongue, Best et al. (2010, 2014) have demonstrated that Wubuy, an Australian language with four coronal stop places, shows significant differences in tongue tip vs. tongue body motion range and motion coordination contrasting apicals and laminals. Here we continue this line of inquiry with three coronal obstruents in English, the apical alveolar stop /d/ and alveo-palatal affricate /d͡ ʒ/ vs. the laminal dental fricative /d/. The results show support for tongue tip/body motion range differences between /d/ and /ð/ across vowel contexts. They also showed a tongue tip/body motion coordination distinction between the apical /d/ and laminal /ð/, which was significant for /i/ and /u/ but not /a/ contexts. Results are consistent with the Wubuy findings (Best et al, 2010, 2014) despite the differences in the coronal obstruent contrasts of the two languages, suggesting an apical/laminal distinction in tongue tip/body coordination.
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Keyword:
200404 - Laboratory Phonetics and Speech Science; 970120 - Expanding Knowledge in Languages; Communication and Culture
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URL: http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/545956 http://www.issp2014.uni-koeln.de/
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Magnitude of phonetic distinction predicts success at early word learning in native and non-native accents
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First language suprasegmentally-conditioned syllable length distinctions influence perception and production of second language vowel contrasts
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Focusing the lens of language experience: Perception of Ma'di stops by Greek and English bilinguals and monolinguals
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Development of phonological constancy: 19-month-olds, but not 15-month-olds, identify words in a non-native regional accent
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Development of phonological constancy : 19-month-olds, but not 15-month-olds, identify words in a non-native regional accent
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Development of word recognition across speakers and accents
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97 |
First language suprasegmentally-conditioned syllable length distinctions influence perception and production of second language vowel contrasts
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Recognizing words across regional accents : the role of perceptual assimilation in lexical competition
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The development of language constancy : attention to native versus nonnative accents
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L2 English learners' recogniton of words spoken in familar versus unfamiliar English accents
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