Literature DB >> 26677645

Consonants are More Important than Vowels in the Bouba-kiki Effect.

Mathilde Fort, Alexander Martin, Sharon Peperkamp.   

Abstract

Adult listeners systematically associate certain speech sounds with round or spiky shapes, a sound-symbolic phenomenon known as the "bouba-kiki effect." In this study, we investigate the respective influences of consonants and vowels in this phenomenon. French participants were asked to match auditorily presented pseudowords with one of two visually presented shapes, one round and one spiky. The pseudowords were created by crossing either two consonant pairs with a wide range of vowels (experiment 1 and 2) or two vowel pairs with a wide range of consonants (experiment 3). Analyses showed that consonants have a greater influence than vowels in the bouba-kiki effect. Importantly, this asymmetry cannot be due to an onset bias, as a strong consonantal influence is found both with CVCV (experiment 1) and VCV (experiment 2) stimuli. We discuss these results in terms of the differential role of consonants and vowels in speech perception.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26677645     DOI: 10.1177/0023830914534951

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lang Speech        ISSN: 0023-8309            Impact factor:   1.500


  17 in total

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2.  Sound-meaning association biases evidenced across thousands of languages.

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5.  Neural Basis of the Sound-Symbolic Crossmodal Correspondence Between Auditory Pseudowords and Visual Shapes.

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Journal:  Multisens Res       Date:  2021-08-11       Impact factor: 2.352

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Authors:  Kazuko Shinohara; Naoto Yamauchi; Shigeto Kawahara; Hideyuki Tanaka
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9.  Glyph guessing for 'oo' and 'ee': spatial frequency information in sound symbolic matching for ancient and unfamiliar scripts.

Authors:  Nora Turoman; Suzy J Styles
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2017-09-13       Impact factor: 2.963

10.  When Does Maluma/Takete Fail? Two Key Failures and a Meta-Analysis Suggest That Phonology and Phonotactics Matter.

Authors:  Suzy J Styles; Lauren Gawne
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2017-08-25
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