The role of acoustic similarity in listening to foreign-accented speech: Recognition of Spanish-accented English words by Japanese native listeners

被引:0
|
作者
Matsui, Sanae [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Sophia Univ, Dept Language & Linguist, Chiyoda Ku, 7?1 Kioicho, Tokyo 1028554, Japan
[2] Nanzan Univ, Fac Foreign Studies, Nagoya, Japan
关键词
Foreign accent; Intelligibility; Vowel; Acoustic similarity; Formant frequency; INTELLIGIBILITY; VOWELS; COMPREHENSIBILITY;
D O I
10.1250/ast.e23.83
中图分类号
O42 [声学];
学科分类号
070206 ; 082403 ;
摘要
Non-native speakers exhibit distinct speech characteristics from native speakers, referred to as foreign accents. Previous studies have shown that foreign -accented speech can be more easily understood than native speech when the native language of the talker matches that of the listener (e.g., Spanish -accented English perceived by Spanish native speakers) due to acoustic -phonetic similarities between the speech input and the listener's own accent. The present study applied this idea to a case where the native languages of the talker and the listeners differ but where the accents of the talker and listener could share acoustic -phonetic similarities (Spanish -accented English perceived by Japanese native speakers). We examined whether English words with a Spanish accent were recognized more quickly when the stimuli were acoustically closer to the accent of Japanese native listeners than those with Received Pronunciation (RP) were. A word identification experiment was conducted, where Japanese native speakers heard stimuli with RP and a Spanish accent. The results confirmed that the acoustic similarity somewhat facilitated word recognition, even for stimuli with a foreign accent. However, this advantage did not exceed the recognition of stimuli with a native accent. These results suggest a persistent bias towards easier recognition of stimuli produced by native speakers.
引用
收藏
页码:216 / 223
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Wildcat Corpus of Native- and Foreign-accented English: Communicative Efficiency across Conversational Dyads with Varying Language Alignment Profiles
    Van Engen, Kristin J.
    Baese-Berk, Melissa
    Baker, Rachel E.
    Choi, Arim
    Kim, Midam
    Bradlow, Ann R.
    LANGUAGE AND SPEECH, 2010, 53 : 510 - 540
  • [42] Tuning out tone errors? Native listeners do not down-weight tones when hearing unsystematic tone errors in foreign-accented Mandarin
    Pelzl, Eric
    Carlson, Matthew T.
    Guo, Taomei
    Jackson, Carrie N.
    van Hell, Janet G.
    BILINGUALISM-LANGUAGE AND COGNITION, 2021, 24 (01) : 215 - 222
  • [43] Where does a 'foreign' accent matter? German, Spanish and Singaporean listeners' reactions to Dutch-accented English, and standard British and American English accents
    Nejjari, Warda
    Gerritsen, Marinel
    van Hout, Roeland
    Planken, Brigitte
    PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (04):
  • [44] The effects of non-native listeners' L1 background and L2 proficiency on the perception of foreign accent for pitch-manipulated native and Chinese accented English speech
    Xue, Xiaojiao
    Lee, Joo-Kyeong
    LINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 2014, 31 (02) : 275 - 303
  • [45] HOW DO SECOND LANGUAGE LISTENERS PERCEIVE THE COMPREHENSIBILITY OF FOREIGN-ACCENTED SPEECH? ROLES OF FIRST LANGUAGE PROFILES, SECOND LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY, AGE, EXPERIENCE, FAMILIARITY, AND METACOGNITION
    Saito, Kazuya
    Tran, Mai
    Suzukida, Yui
    Sun, Hui
    Magne, Viktoria
    Ilkan, Meltem
    STUDIES IN SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 2019, 41 (05) : 1133 - 1149
  • [46] Non-native listeners perceiving foreign accentedness of English speech: new evidence from Chinese and Spanish listeners
    Xue, Xiaojiao
    Shan, Yixue
    Wang, Xinyu
    Dunham, Richard Erick
    CIRCULO DE LINGUISTICA APLICADA A LA COMUNICACION, 2023, (95): : 263 - 275
  • [47] Listening Effort by Native and Nonnative Listeners Due to Noise, Reverberation, and Talker Foreign Accent During English Speech Perception
    Peng, Z. Ellen
    Wang, Lily M.
    JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2019, 62 (04): : 1068 - 1081
  • [48] The Role of Acoustic Similarity and Non-Native Categorisation in Predicting Non-Native Discrimination: Brazilian Portuguese Vowels by English vs. Spanish Listeners
    Elvin, Jaydene
    Williams, Daniel
    Shaw, Jason A.
    Best, Catherine T.
    Escudero, Paola
    LANGUAGES, 2021, 6 (01)
  • [49] Relevant Phonetic-aware Neural Acoustic Models using Native English and Japanese Speech for Japanese-English Automatic Speech Recognition
    Masumura, Ryo
    Kabashima, Suguru
    Moriya, Takafumi
    Kobashikawa, Satoshi
    Yamaguchi, Yoshikazu
    Aono, Yushi
    2018 ASIA-PACIFIC SIGNAL AND INFORMATION PROCESSING ASSOCIATION ANNUAL SUMMIT AND CONFERENCE (APSIPA ASC), 2018, : 1435 - 1439
  • [50] Listening to accented speech in Brazilian Portuguese: On the role of fricative voicing and vowel duration in the identification of /s/ - /z/ minimal pairs produced by speakers of L1 Spanish
    Alves, Ubirata Kickhofel
    Brisolara, Luciene Bassols
    JOURNAL OF PORTUGUESE LINGUISTICS, 2020, 19