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Non-Māori-speaking New Zealanders have a Māori proto-lexicon
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From categories to gradience: Auto-coding sociophonetic variation with random forests
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 11, No 1 (2020); 6 ; 1868-6354 (2020)
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Phonological and Morphological Effects in the Acceptability of Pseudowords
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From categories to gradience: Auto-coding sociophonetic variation with random forests
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Non-Māori-speaking New Zealanders have a Māori proto-lexicon
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Word frequency effects in sound change as a consequence of perceptual asymmetries: An exemplar-based model.
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Abstract social categories facilitate access to socially skewed words ; PLOS ONE
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 9, No 1 (2018); 11 ; 1868-6354 (2018)
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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Resilience of English vowel perception across regional accent variation
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Abstract:
In two categorization experiments using phonotactically legal nonce words, we tested Australian English listeners' perception of all vowels in their own accent as well as in four less familiar regional varieties of English which differ in how their vowel realizations diverge from Australian English: London, Yorkshire, Newcastle (UK), and New Zealand. Results of Experiment 1 indicated that amongst the vowel differences described in sociophonetic studies and attested in our stimulus materials, only a small subset caused greater perceptual difficulty for Australian listeners than for the corresponding Australian English vowels. We discuss this perceptual tolerance for vowel variation in terms of how perceptual assimilation of phonetic details into abstract vowel categories may contribute to recognizing words across variable pronunciations. Experiment 2 determined whether short-term multi-talker exposure would facilitate accent adaptation, particularly for those vowels that proved more difficult to categorize in Experiment 1. For each accent separately, participants listened to a pre-test passage in the nonce word accent but told by novel talkers before completing the same task as in Experiment 1. In contrast to previous studies showing rapid adaptation to talker-specific variation, our listeners' subsequent vowel assimilations were largely unaffected by exposure to other talkers' accent-specific variation.
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Keyword:
accents and accentuation; English language; perceptual learning; vowels; XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:49049 https://doi.org/10.5334/labphon.87
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Changing word usage predicts changing word durations in New Zealand English
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Social Salience Discriminates Learnability of Contextual Cues in an Artificial Language
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The emergence of linguistic structure in an online iterated learning task
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Cancer beliefs and patient activation in a diverse, multi-lingual primary care sample
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Participants conform to humans but not to humanoid robots in an English past tense formation task
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From Newcastle MOUTH to Aussie ears: Australians' perceptual assimilation and adaptation for Newcastle UK vowels
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