Language specific listening of Japanese geminate consonants: a cross-linguistic study
نویسندگان
چکیده
Various aspects of linguistic experience influence the way we segment, represent, and process speech signals. The Japanese phonetic and orthographic systems represent geminate consonants (double consonants, e.g., /ss/, /kk/) in a unique way compared to other languages: one abstract representation is used to characterize the first part of geminate consonants despite the acoustic difference between two distinct realizations of geminate consonants (silence in the case of e.g., stop consonants and elongation in the case of fricative consonants). The current study tests whether this discrepancy between abstract representations and acoustic realizations influences how native speakers of Japanese perceive geminate consonants. The experiments used pseudo words containing either the geminate consonant /ss/ or a manipulated version in which the first part was replaced by silence /_s/. The sound /_s/ is acoustically similar to /ss/, yet does not occur in everyday speech. Japanese listeners demonstrated a bias to group these two types into the same category while Italian and Dutch listeners distinguished them. The results thus confirmed that distinguishing fricative geminate consonants with silence from those with sustained frication is not crucial for Japanese native listening. Based on this observation, we propose that native speakers of Japanese tend to segment geminated consonants into two parts and that the first portion of fricative geminates is perceptually similar to a silent duration. This representation is compatible with both Japanese orthography and phonology. Unlike previous studies that were inconclusive in how native speakers segment geminate consonants, our study demonstrated a relatively strong effect of Japanese specific listening. Thus the current experimental methods may open up new lines of investigation into the relationship between development of phonological representation, orthography and speech perception.
منابع مشابه
Perception of the moraic obstruent /Q/: a cross-linguistic study
Japanese natives segment speech into morae. The current study tested whether this extends to perception of geminate consonants: do Japanese natives rely on the moraic obstruent /Q/, and if so, which acoustic feature is perceived to characterize /Q/? Based on an informal interview, we hypothesized that Japanese natives rely on /Q/ that is represented as a silent duration. If so, it should be mor...
متن کاملFactors influencing perceptual attainment of Japanese geminate consonants by Korean learners of Japanese
Two experiments were carried out to determine the perceptual mechanism which distinguishes geminate consonants of Japanese by Korean learners of Japanese. The first investigated the categorical perception of Japanese geminate consonants. In this experiment, we carried out a listening test to measure perceptual characteristics by Korean learners. The second was an interview of Korean learners on...
متن کاملCross-language perception of Japanese singleton and geminate consonants: preliminary data from non-native learners of Japanese and native speakers of Italian and australian English
We examined the perception of Japanese consonant length contrasts (singleton vs geminate) in four groups of listeners: two groups of non-native learners of Japanese, three each at highly-advanced (NNJ1) and upper-intermediate (NNJ2) levels, native speakers of Italian (IT) (n=10) and Australian English (OZ) (n=8) with no knowledge of Japanese. Because Italian, like Japanese, uses consonant lengt...
متن کاملTitle: Perception and Production of Geminate and Single Consonants by Learners of Japanese Language
2. Literature review 2.1 What is a geminate? The Japanese consonant system includes the geminate, which is phonologically transcribed as [Q] and it is one of the most indispensable features to explain Japanese phonology. In general, there are four environments in which geminates occur. First, verb inflections trigger the appearance of geminates. When a verb stem ends with /t/, /r/, or /w/, and ...
متن کاملArticulation of single and geminate consonants and its relation to the duration of the preceding vowel in Japanese
Japanese is a language that has contrasts between single and geminate consonants. This phonological contrast is claimed to affect the duration of the neighboring vowel so that the preceding vowel is phonetically longer before geminates. The present study examines the difference in articulatory manifestations between single and geminate consonants and their relation to the duration of the preced...
متن کامل