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Weighting of amplitude and formant rise time cues by school-aged children : a mismatch negativity study
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Constraints on tone sensitivity in novel word learning by monolingual and bilingual infants : tone properties are more influential than tone familiarity
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Are lexical tones musical? : native language's influence on neural response to pitch in different domains
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Effect of linguistic and musical experience on distributional learning of nonnative lexical tones
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The origins of babytalk : smiling, teaching or social convergence?
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The temporal modulation structure of infant-directed speech
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Neural processing of amplitude and formant rise time in dyslexia
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Mature neural responses to infant-directed speech but not adult-directed speech in pre-verbal infants
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The time course for processing vowels and lexical tones : reading aloud Thai words
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Auditory-visual lexical tone perception in Thai elderly listeners with and without hearing impairment
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OZI : Australian English communicative development inventory
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Novel word learning, reading difficulties, and phonological processing skills
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Perceptual assimilation of lexical tone : the roles of language experience and visual information
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Distributional learning of lexical tones : a comparison of attended vs unattended listening
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Universality and language-specific experience in the perception of lexical tone and pitch
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Burnham, Denis K. (R7357); Kasisopa, Benjawan (R17619); Reid, Amanda (R16657); Luksaneeyanawin, Sudaporn; Lacerda, Francisco; Attina, Virginie (R14534); Xu Rattanasone, Nan; Schwarz, Iris-Corinna; Webster, Diane. - : U.K., Cambridge University Press, 2015
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Abstract:
Two experiments focus on Thai tone perception by native speakers of tone languages (Thai, Cantonese, and Mandarin), a pitch–accent (Swedish), and a nontonal (English) language. In Experiment 1, there was better auditory-only and auditory-visual discrimination by tone and pitch–accent language speakers than by nontone language speakers. Conversely and counterintuitively, there was better visual-only discrimination by nontone language speakers than tone and pitch-accent language speakers. Nevertheless, visual augmentation of auditory tone perception in noise was evident for all five language groups. In Experiment 2, involving discrimination in three fundamental frequency equivalent auditory contexts, tone and pitch-accent language participants showed equivalent discrimination for normal Thai speech, filtered speech, and violin sounds. In contrast, nontone language listeners had significantly better discrimination for violin sounds than filtered speech and in turn speech. Together the results show that tone perception is determined by both auditory and visual information, by acoustic and linguistic contexts, and by universal and experiential factors.
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Keyword:
intonation (phonetics); speech perception; Thai language; tone (phonetics); XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0142716414000496 http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:31445
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Auditory-visual augmentation of Thai lexical tone perception in the elderly
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Mandarin listeners can learn non-native lexical tones through distributional learning
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A tale of two features : perception of Cantonese lexical tone and English lexical stress in Cantonese-English bilinguals
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Auditory-visual tone perception in hearing impaired Thai listeners
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