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Perception of nonnative tonal contrasts by Mandarin-English and English-Mandarin sequential bilinguals
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A Perception Study of Rioplatense Spanish
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In: McNair Scholars Research Journal (2019)
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A glottalized tone in Muong (Vietic): a pilot study based on audio and electroglottographic recordings
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In: ICPhS XIX (19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences ) ; https://hal-univ-paris3.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02088021 ; ICPhS XIX (19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences ), Melbourne, Australia. 2019 (2019)
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Towards a derived typology of branching onsets
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In: Government Phonology Round Table ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02419093 ; Government Phonology Round Table, Jun 2019, Vienna, Austria ; https://linguistik.univie.ac.at/en/research/government-phonology-round-table-2019-gprt2019/programme/ (2019)
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10 |
Evidence against interactive effects on articulation in Javanese verb paradigms.
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In: Psychonomic bulletin & review, vol 26, iss 5 (2019)
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Phonetic Evidence for a Feed-�forward Model: Rounding and Center of Gravity of English [ʃ]
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Teaching linguistics gotta catch ’em all: Skills grading in undergraduate linguistics
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In: Language, vol 95, iss 4 (2019)
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Gradience and locality in phonology: Case studies from Turkic vowel harmony
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Final devoicing of fricatives in French: Studying variation in large-scale corpora with automatic alignment
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In: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences ; 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02270089 ; 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, 2019, Melbourne, Australia. pp.295-299 ; https://assta.org/proceedings/ICPhS2019/ (2019)
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16 |
Inter-consonantal intervals in Tripolitanian Libyan Arabic: Accounting for variable epenthesis
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 10, No 1 (2019); 5 ; 1868-6354 (2019)
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The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 10, No 1 (2019); 16 ; 1868-6354 (2019)
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Effects of phonotactic predictability on sensitivity to phonetic detail
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 10, No 1 (2019); 8 ; 1868-6354 (2019)
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Abstract:
Japanese speakers systematically devoice or delete high vowels [i, u] between two voiceless consonants. Japanese listeners also report perceiving the same high vowels between consonant clusters even in the absence of a vocalic segment. Although perceptual vowel epenthesis has been described primarily as a phonotactic repair strategy, where a phonetically minimal vowel is epenthesized by default, few studies have investigated how the predictability of a vowel in a given context affects the choice of epenthetic vowel. The present study uses a forced-choice labeling task to test how sensitive Japanese listeners are to coarticulatory cues of high vowels [i, u] and non-high vowel [a] in devoicing and non-devoicing contexts. Devoicing contexts were further divided into high-predictability contexts, where the phonotactic distribution strongly favors one of the high vowels, and low-predictability contexts, where both high vowels are allowed, to specifically test for the effects of predictability. Results reveal a strong tendency towards [u] epenthesis as previous studies have found, but the results also reveal a sensitivity to coarticulatory cues that override the default [u] epenthesis, particularly in low-predictability contexts. Previous studies have shown that predictability affects phonetic implementation during production, and this study provides evidence predictability has similar effects during perception.
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Keyword:
Japanese; Perceptual repair; Phonetics; phonology; phonotactics; recoverability
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URL: https://doi.org/10.5334/labphon.125 https://www.journal-labphon.org/jms/article/view/125
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Epenthetic vowel production of unfamiliar medial consonant clusters by Japanese speakers
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 10, No 1 (2019); 21 ; 1868-6354 (2019)
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Researcher degrees of freedom in phonetic research
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In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 10, No 1 (2019); 1 ; 1868-6354 (2019)
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