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1
The role of loanwords in the intelligibility of written Danish among Swedes
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2
Lexical analyses of the function and phonology of Papuan Malay word stress
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3
The perception of emotion and focus prosody with varying acoustic cues in cochlear implant simulations with varying filter slopes
van de Velde, Daan J.; Schiller, Niels O.; van Heuven, Vincent J.. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2017
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4
The Interlanguage Speech Intelligibility Benefit as Bias Toward Native-Language Phonology
Wang, Hongyan; van Heuven, Vincent J.. - : SAGE Publications, 2015
Abstract: Two hypotheses have been advanced in the recent literature with respect to the so-called Interlanguage Speech Intelligibility Benefit (ISIB): a nonnative speaker will be better understood by a another nonnative listener than a native speaker of the target language will be (a) only when the nonnatives share the same native language (matched interlanguage) or (b) even when the nonnatives have different mother tongues (non-matched interlanguage). Based on a survey of published experimental materials, the present article will demonstrate that both the restricted (a) and the generalized (b) hypotheses are false when the ISIB effect is evaluated in terms of absolute intelligibility scores. We will then propose a simple way to compute a relative measure for the ISIB (R-ISIB), which we claim is a more insightful way of evaluating the interlanguage benefit, and test the hypotheses in relative (R-ISIB) terms on the same literature data. We then find that our R-ISIB measure only supports the more restricted hypothesis (a) while rejecting the more general hypothesis (b). This finding shows that the native language shared by the interactants biases the listener toward interpreting sounds in terms of the phonology of the shared mother tongue.
Keyword: Auditory Bias Special issue
URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515613661
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27551352
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4975108/
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5
Effects of immediate repetition at different stages of consecutive interpreting training: An experimental study
In: Linguistics in the Netherlands. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 30 (2013) 1, 201-213
OLC Linguistik
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6
Is spoken Danish less intelligible than Swedish?
In: ISSN: 0167-6393 ; EISSN: 1872-7182 ; Speech Communication ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00698848 ; Speech Communication, Elsevier : North-Holland, 2010, 52 (11-12), pp.1022. ⟨10.1016/j.specom.2010.06.005⟩ (2010)
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7
Mutual intelligibility of Chinese dialects experimentally tested
In: Lingua <Amsterdam>. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 119 (2009) 5, 709-732
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8
Perceptual assimilation of English vowels by Chinese listeners Can native-language interference be predicted?
In: Linguistics in the Netherlands. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 24 (2007), 150-161
OLC Linguistik
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9
Mutual intelligibility and similarity of Chinese dialects Predicting judgments from objective measures
In: Linguistics in the Netherlands. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 24 (2007), 223-234
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10
Introduction: between stress and tonefnr rid="fn1">fn id="fn1">We gratefully acknowledge the International Institute for Asian Studies, the organisers and main sponsors of the Between Stress and Tone conference, held in Leiden from 16 to 18 June 2005, for their excellent support both in the preparation and in the running of the conference. We also thank the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) and the United Kingdom Arts and Humanities Research Council for supporting Bert Remijsen's involvement in this proj
In: Phonology. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 23 (2006) 2, 121-124
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11
Evidence for separate lexical tone and sentence intonation: A perception study of Chinese aphasic patients
In: Brain & language. - Orlando, Fla. [u.a.] : Elsevier 91 (2004) 1, 60-61
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12
Evidence for separate tonal and segmental tiers in the lexical specification of words: A case study of a brain-damaged Chinese speaker
In: Brain & language. - Orlando, Fla. [u.a.] : Elsevier 91 (2004) 3, 282-293
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