DocumentCode
2016857
Title
Effects of syllable positions on Taiwanese Mandarin sibilant perception
Author
Chiu, Chenhao ; Babel, Molly
Author_Institution
Dept. of Linguistics, Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
fYear
2010
fDate
Nov. 29 2010-Dec. 3 2010
Firstpage
60
Lastpage
64
Abstract
Both frication noise and formant transitions have been argued to be important cues in sibilant perception. Additionally, the availability of coarticulatory cues to adjacent segments in vowel transitions has been argued to be asymmetric; more coarticulatory information is available in vowel onsets. Less research has examined how the use of cues may vary across syllable positions. This paper investigates cue-weighting in sibilant perception by Taiwanese Mandarin listeners. Specifically, we examine whether listeners´ attention is drawn to different cues when the sibilant occurs in a phonotactically illegal position. The results demonstrate that listeners are more sensitive to sibilants distinctions in phonotactically illegal contexts (VC sequences).We conclude with the observation that while the reliance on frication noise seems to be greater in phonotactically illegal contexts, in phonotactically legal contexts, place of articulation cues from the frication noise and vowel transitions are more integrated.
Keywords
linguistics; natural language processing; Taiwanese Mandarin sibilant perception; VC sequences; adjacent segments; coarticulatory cues; coarticulatory information; formant transitions; frication noise; syllable position effects; vowel transitions; Acoustics; Context; Dentistry; Law; Noise; Sensitivity; Taiwanese Mandarin; acoustic cues; sibilant perception; syllable positions;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Chinese Spoken Language Processing (ISCSLP), 2010 7th International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Tainan
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-6244-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISCSLP.2010.5684848
Filename
5684848
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