• Title of article

    The labial–coronal effect revisited: Japanese adults say pata, but hear tapa

  • Author/Authors

    Tsuji، نويسنده , , Sho and Gomez، نويسنده , , Nayeli Gonzalez and Medina، نويسنده , , Victoria and Nazzi، نويسنده , , Thierry and Mazuka، نويسنده , , Reiko، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    413
  • To page
    428
  • Abstract
    The labial–coronal effect has originally been described as a bias to initiate a word with a labial consonant–vowel–coronal consonant (LC) sequence. This bias has been explained with constraints on the human speech production system, and its perceptual correlates have motivated the suggestion of a perception–production link. However, previous studies exclusively considered languages in which LC sequences are globally more frequent than their counterpart. The current study examined the LC bias in speakers of Japanese, a language that has been claimed to possess more CL than LC sequences. We first conducted an analysis of Japanese corpora that qualified this claim, and identified a subgroup of consonants (plosives) exhibiting a CL bias. Second, focusing on this subgroup of consonants, we found diverging results for production and perception such that Japanese speakers exhibited an articulatory LC bias, but a perceptual CL bias. The CL perceptual bias, however, was modulated by language of presentation, and was only present for stimuli recorded by a Japanese, but not a French, speaker. A further experiment with native speakers of French showed the opposite effect, with an LC bias for French stimuli only. Overall, we find support for a universal, articulatory motivated LC bias in production, supporting a motor explanation of the LC effect, while perceptual biases are influenced by distributional frequencies of the native language.
  • Keywords
    Perceptuo-motor interactions , Phonological tendencies , Labial–coronal bias , Speech Perception , Speech production
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Record number

    2077564