Perception and Production of Singleton and Geminate Stops in Japanese: Implications for the Theory of Acoustic Invariance
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Shigeaki Amano
Abstract
The theory of relational acoustic invariance claims that there are stable acoustic properties in speech signals that correspond to a phonological feature, and that the perception system utilizes these acoustic properties for stable perception of a phoneme. The present study examines whether such an invariance exists in native listeners' perception of Japanese singleton and geminate stops despite variability in speaking rate and word length, and whether this perception corresponds to production. Native Japanese listeners identified singleton and geminate stops in continua of 3- and 4-mora words spoken at different speaking rates. Results indicated that the perception boundary is well predicted by a linear function with two variables: durations of stop closure and the (C)V(C)CV portion (with the contrasting stops underlined) of the 3- and 4-mora words. In addition, these two variables were in a consistent relationship for both perception and production of words containing 2-4 moras. The results support the relational acoustic invariance theory.
verified
References
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© 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Front and Back Matter
- Front & Back Matter
- Original Paper
- The Phonetic Realization of Devoiced Vowels in the Southern Ute Language
- Phonetic and Visual Cues to Questionhood in French Conversation
- Perception and Production of Singleton and Geminate Stops in Japanese: Implications for the Theory of Acoustic Invariance
- Further Section
- Book Notice
- Publications Received for Review
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Front and Back Matter
- Front & Back Matter
- Original Paper
- The Phonetic Realization of Devoiced Vowels in the Southern Ute Language
- Phonetic and Visual Cues to Questionhood in French Conversation
- Perception and Production of Singleton and Geminate Stops in Japanese: Implications for the Theory of Acoustic Invariance
- Further Section
- Book Notice
- Publications Received for Review