Cross-language Perception of Word-final Stops by Native Vietnamese Listeners: Preliminary Results on the Role of Specific, Non-native Phonetic Experience


Autoria(s): Tsukada, Kimiko; Nguyen, Thu T. A.; Roengpitya, Rungpat
Contribuinte(s)

P. Warren

C. I. Watson

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

This study examined the discrimination of word-final stop contrasts (/p/-/t/, /p/-/k/, /t/-/k/) in English and Thai by 12 listeners who speak Vietnamese as their first language (L1). Vietnamese shares specific phonetic realization of stops with Thai, i.e., unreleased final stop and differs from English which allows both released and unreleased final stops. These 12 native Vietnamese (NV) listeners’ discrimination accuracy was compared to that of the two listener groups (Australian English (AE), native Thai (NT)) tested in previous studies. The NV group was less accurate than the native group in discriminating both English and Thai stop contrasts. In particular, for the Thai /t/-/k/ contrast, they were significantly less accurate than the AE listeners. The present findings suggest that experience with specific (i.e., unreleased) and native phonetic realization of sounds may be essential in accurate discrimination of final stop contrasts. The effect of L1 dialect on cross-language speech perception is discussed.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:103709

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australian Speech Science and Technology Association

Palavras-Chave #E1 #380204 Laboratory Phonetics and Speech Science #751005 Communication across languages and cultures
Tipo

Conference Paper