The effects of native prosodic system and segmental context on Cantonese tone perception by Mandarin and Japanese listeners

被引:9
|
作者
Zhu, Min [1 ]
Chen, Xiaoxiang [1 ]
Yang, Yuxiao [2 ]
机构
[1] Hunan Univ, Coll Foreign Languages, 2 Lushan South Rd, Changsha 410082, Peoples R China
[2] Hunan Normal Univ, Foreign Studies Coll, 36 Lushan Rd, Changsha 410081, Peoples R China
来源
关键词
CROSS-LANGUAGE PERCEPTION; PHONETIC FACTORS; LEXICAL TONES; ASSIMILATION; ENGLISH; CUES;
D O I
10.1121/10.0005274
中图分类号
O42 [声学];
学科分类号
070206 ; 082403 ;
摘要
This study explores the effects of native prosodic system and segmental context on the perception of Cantonese tones by Mandarin and Japanese listeners. In Experiment 1, 13 Mandarin and 13 Japanese subjects took part in a two-alternative forced-choice discrimination test of Cantonese tones in different segmental contexts (familiar vs unfamiliar). In Experiment 2, 20 Mandarin listeners participated in a perceptual assimilation task that examined the cross-language perceptual similarity between Mandarin and Cantonese tones. Results showed that Mandarin listeners were comparable to Japanese counterparts in discriminability, but the former attended more to pitch contour differences while the latter were more sensitive to pitch height. Moreover, the effect of segmental context was significant exclusively in the Mandarin group, whereas the Japanese group performed stably across syllables in discriminating Cantonese tones. It seemed that unfamiliar context rendered lower perceptual similarity, which further hindered corresponding discrimination by the Mandarin group. In addition, segmental effects were mainly observed in the assimilation patterns of category goodness or uncategorized-categorized. These findings suggested that non-native tone perception could be modulated by listeners' native prosodic structures in a finer way.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:4214 / 4227
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] CONTEXT EFFECTS IN THE PERCEPTION OF LEXICAL TONE
    FOX, RA
    QI, YY
    JOURNAL OF CHINESE LINGUISTICS, 1990, 18 (02) : 261 - 283
  • [32] Effects of acoustic cues and phonetic contexts on Cantonese tone perception and acquisition
    Tong, Shelley Xiuli
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE EXPERIMENTALE, 2010, 64 (04): : 293 - 293
  • [33] Effects of speaker variability and noise on Mandarin fricative identification by native and non-native listeners
    Lee, Chao-Yang
    Zhang, Yu
    Li, Ximing
    Tao, Liang
    Bond, Z. S.
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2012, 132 (02): : 1130 - 1140
  • [34] Visual-auditory perception of prosodic focus in Japanese by native and non-native speakers
    Zhang, Yixin
    Chen, Xi
    Chen, Si
    Meng, Yuzhe
    Lee, Albert
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2023, 17
  • [35] Categorical perception of lexical tones in native Mandarin-speaking listeners with sensorineural hearing loss
    Qi, Beier
    Liu, Peng
    Gu, Xin
    Dong, Ruijuan
    Liu, Bo
    ACTA OTO-LARYNGOLOGICA, 2018, 138 (09) : 801 - 806
  • [36] The effects of metaphonological awareness training on L3 Mandarin tone acquisition by Cantonese learners
    Chen, Hsueh Chu
    Han, Qian Wen
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTILINGUALISM, 2023, 20 (02) : 388 - 407
  • [37] Effects of prosodic cues in non-native perception of personality
    Li, Bin
    Guan, Yihan
    Jangjamras, Jirapat
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 58 : 250 - 251
  • [38] Effects of L2 experience on Mandarin listeners? perception of Korean politeness
    Oh, Grace Eunhae
    Brown, Lucien
    Idemaru, Kaori
    Cui, Mao
    LINGUA, 2022, 272
  • [39] Effects of Preceding Vocabulary Context on the Perception of Mandarin Vowels
    Huang, Xunan
    Zhang, Caicai
    Chen, Fei
    Sieg, Jonathan
    Wang, Lan
    Shi, Feng
    2016 10TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON CHINESE SPOKEN LANGUAGE PROCESSING (ISCSLP), 2016,
  • [40] Hearing Aid Low Frequency Cut: Effect on Mandarin Tone and Vowel Perception in Normal-Hearing Listeners
    Zhang, Jianxing
    McPherson, Bradley
    FOLIA PHONIATRICA ET LOGOPAEDICA, 2008, 60 (04) : 179 - 187