| Literature DB >> 35390675 |
Liquan Liu1, Regine Lai2, Leher Singh3, Marina Kalashnikova4, Patrick C M Wong5, Benjawan Kasisopa6, Ao Chen7, Chutamanee Onsuwan8, Denis Burnham9.
Abstract
Some prior investigations suggest that tone perception is flexible, reasonably independent of native phonology, whereas others suggest it is constrained by native phonology. We address this issue in a systematic and comprehensive investigation of adult tone perception. Sampling from diverse tone and non-tone speaking communities, we tested discrimination of the three major tone systems (Cantonese, Thai, Mandarin) that dominate the tone perception literature, in relation to native language and language experience as well as stimulus variation (tone properties, presentation order, pitch cues) using linear mixed effect modelling and multidimensional scaling. There was an overall discrimination advantage for tone language speakers and for native tones. However, language- and tone-specific effects, and presentation order effects also emerged. Thus, over and above native phonology, stimulus variation exerts a powerful influence on tone discrimination. This study provides a tone atlas, a reference guide to inform empirical studies of tone sensitivity, both retrospectively and prospectively.Entities:
Keywords: Contrast type; Cross-linguistic perception; Cue-weighting; Multi-dimensional analysis; Perceptual asymmetry; Tone; Tone system
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35390675 DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2022.105106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Lang ISSN: 0093-934X Impact factor: 2.381