Title :
Perception of Mandarin intonation
Author_Institution :
Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY, USA
Abstract :
This study investigates how tone and intonation, and how focus and intonation, interact in intonation type (statement versus question) identification. A perception experiment was conducted on a speech corpus of 1040 utterances. Sixteen listeners participated in the experiment. The results reveal three asymmetries: statement and question intonation identification; effects of the sentence-final Tone2 and Tone4 on question intonation identification; and effects of the final focus on statement and question intonation identification. These asymmetries suggest that: (1) statement intonation is a default or unmarked intonation type whereas question intonation is a marked intonation type; (2) question intonation has a higher prosodic strength at the sentence final position; (3) there is a tone-dependent mechanism of question intonation at the sentence-final position.
Keywords :
linguistics; speech processing; speech recognition; Mandarin intonation perception; focus; prosodic strength; question identification; sentence-final Tone2; sentence-final Tone4; speech corpus; statement identification; tone; tone-dependent mechanism; Natural languages; Speech;
Conference_Titel :
Chinese Spoken Language Processing, 2004 International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8678-7
DOI :
10.1109/CHINSL.2004.1409582