Title of article
The multidimensional nature of hyperspeech: Evidence from Japanese vowel devoicing
Author/Authors
Martin، نويسنده , , Andrew and Utsugi، نويسنده , , Akira and Mazuka، نويسنده , , Reiko، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
13
From page
216
To page
228
Abstract
We investigate the hypothesis that infant-directed speech is a form of hyperspeech, optimized for intelligibility, by focusing on vowel devoicing in Japanese. Using a corpus of infant-directed and adult-directed Japanese, we show that speakers implement high vowel devoicing less often when speaking to infants than when speaking to adults, consistent with the hyperspeech hypothesis. The same speakers, however, increase vowel devoicing in careful, read speech, a speech style which might be expected to pattern similarly to infant-directed speech. We argue that both infant-directed and read speech can be considered listener-oriented speech styles—each is optimized for the specific needs of its intended listener. We further show that in non-high vowels, this trend is reversed: speakers devoice more often in infant-directed speech and less often in read speech, suggesting that devoicing in the two types of vowels is driven by separate mechanisms in Japanese.
Keywords
Phonological rules , Japanese , Hyperspeech , Read speech , Infant-Directed Speech
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078097
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