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Perceptual assimilation of regionally accented Mandarin lexical tones by native Beijing Mandarin listeners
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[In Press] The Italian Roots in Australian Soil (IRIAS) multilingual speech corpus : speech variation in two generations of Italo-Australians
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Evidence for active control of tongue lateralization in Australian English /l/
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[In Press] A short-form version of the Australian English communicative development inventory
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The role of acoustic similarity and non-native categorisation in predicting non-native discrimination : Brazilian Portuguese vowels by English vs. Spanish listeners
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Bilingual phonology in dichotic perception: A case study of Malayalam and English voicing
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 5, No 1 (2020); 73 ; 2397-1835 (2020)
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Bilingual phonology in dichotic perception : a case study of Malayalam and English voicing
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Native phonological and phonetic influences in perceptual assimilation of monosyllabic Thai lexical tones by Mandarin and Vietnamese listeners
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Tone differentiation as a means for assessing non-native imitation of Thai tones by Mandarin speakers
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Abstract:
Non-native tone production and imitation have been found to be phonetically deviant from native production for some discrete measures. However, it remains unresolved whether nonnative imitation differs from native production in terms of the differentiation of tones in acoustic tone space. 32 native Mandarin speakers who had no experience with Thai imitated five Thai tones, and each participant produced 160 tokens in total under differing memory load and stimulus variability conditions to determine effects of cognitive demands. We calculated two tone differentiation indices (i.e. Index 1: tone differentiation within the tonal space; Index 2: differentiation among tones, both as in Barry & Blamey, 2004) based on F0 onset and F0 offset for Thai tones and the non-native imitations of these Thai tones by Mandarin imitators. There was a significant memory load by vowel variability interaction for Index 1 and a main effect of talker variability and a three-way interaction (memory load ´ talker variability ´ vowel variability) for Index 2, suggesting that tone differentiation is affected by cognitive factors. Nonetheless, non-native tone imitations were not significantly different from native productions on either index, indicating that non-native imitation resembles native production in terms of tone differentiation in an onset-offset F0 space.
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Keyword:
Mandarin dialects; Thai language; tone (phonetics); XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1121/1.5147415 https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:58229
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PAM revisits the articulatory organ hypothesis : Italians' perception of English anterior and Nuu-Chah-Nulth posterior voiceless fricatives
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Hybrid perceptual training to facilitate the learning of nasal final contrasts by highly proficient Japanese learners of Mandarin
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The diversity of tone languages and the roles of pitch variation in non-tone languages : considerations for tone perception research
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Cognitive factors in Thai-naive Mandarin speakers' imitation of Thai lexical tones
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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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