Publikation: Perceiving unstressed vowels in foreign-accented English
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This paper investigated how foreign-accented stress cues affect on-line speech comprehension in British speakers of English. While unstressed English vowels are usually reduced to /ə/, Dutch speakers of English only slightly centralize them. Speakers of both languages differentiate stress by suprasegmentals (duration and intensity). In a cross-modal priming experiment, English listeners heard sentences ending in monosyllabic prime fragments--produced by either an English or a Dutch speaker of English--and performed lexical decisions on visual targets. Primes were either stress-matching ("ab" excised from absurd), stress-mismatching ("ab" from absence), or unrelated ("pro" from profound) with respect to the target (e.g., ABSURD). Results showed a priming effect for stress-matching primes only when produced by the English speaker, suggesting that vowel quality is a more important cue to word stress than suprasegmental information. Furthermore, for visual targets with word-initial secondary stress that do not require vowel reduction (e.g., CAMPAIGN), resembling the Dutch way of realizing stress, there was a priming effect for both speakers. Hence, our data suggest that Dutch-accented English is not harder to understand in general, but it is in instances where the language-specific implementation of lexical stress differs across languages.
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BRAUN, Bettina, Kristin LEMHÖFER, Nivedita MANI, 2011. Perceiving unstressed vowels in foreign-accented English. In: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2011, 129(1), pp. 376-387. ISSN 0001-4966. eISSN 1520-8524. Available under: doi: 10.1121/1.3500688BibTex
@article{Braun2011Perce-29985, year={2011}, doi={10.1121/1.3500688}, title={Perceiving unstressed vowels in foreign-accented English}, number={1}, volume={129}, issn={0001-4966}, journal={The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America}, pages={376--387}, author={Braun, Bettina and Lemhöfer, Kristin and Mani, Nivedita} }
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