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Erickson, Donna; Fujimura, Osamu; Pardo, Bryan – Language and Speech, 1998
Examined mandibular correlates of prosodic control in nonread dialog exchange involving repeated corrections. Articulatory and acoustic data were collected from four American English speakers at an x-ray laboratory, measuring jaw opening. Results suggested a local and global use of the jaw-opening gesture to produce both linguistic or…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Facial Expressions, Intonation, Morphology (Languages)
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Fowler, Carol A.; Brancazio, Lawrence – Language and Speech, 2000
Explored the variation in the resistance that lingual and nonlingual consonants exhibit to coarticulation by following vowels in the schwa+CV disyllables of two native speakers of English. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Consonants, English, Native Speakers
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de Jong, Kenneth J.; Lim, Byung-jin; Nagao, Kyoko – Language and Speech, 2004
Stetson (1951) noted that repeating singleton coda consonants at fast speech rates makes them be perceived as onset consonants affiliated with a following vowel. The current study documents the perception of rate-induced resyllabification, as well as what temporal properties give rise to the perception of syllable affiliation. Stimuli were…
Descriptors: Syllables, Repetition, Speech, Vowels
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Rogers, Catherine L.; Dalby, Jonathan; Nishi, Kanae – Language and Speech, 2004
This study compared the intelligibility of native and foreign-accented English speech presented in quiet and mixed with three different levels of background noise. Two native American English speakers and four native Mandarin Chinese speakers for whom English is a second language each read a list of 50 phonetically balanced sentences (Egan, 1948).…
Descriptors: North American English, Mandarin Chinese, Native Speakers, English (Second Language)
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Clopper, Cynthia G.; Pisoni, David B. – Language and Speech, 2004
Two groups of listeners learned to categorize a set of unfamiliar talkers by dialect region using sentences selected from the TIMIT speech corpus. One group learned to categorize a single talker from each of six American English dialect regions. A second group learned to categorize three talkers from each dialect region. Following training, both…
Descriptors: Sentences, Dialects, North American English, Perception
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Kingston, John – Language and Speech, 2003
Two hypotheses have recently been put forward to account for listeners' ability to distinguish and learn contrasts between speech sounds in foreign languages. First, Best's Perceptual Assimilation Model and Flege's Speech Learning Model both predict that the ease with which a listener can tell one non-native phoneme from another varies directly…
Descriptors: Second Languages, Auditory Perception, German, Native Speakers
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Yu, Ming-chung – Language and Speech, 2005
The present study examines sociolinguistic features of a particular speech act, paying compliments, by comparing and contrasting native Chinese and native American speakers' performances. By focusing on a relatively understudied speaker group such as the Chinese, typically regarded as having rules of speaking and social norms very different from…
Descriptors: Speech Acts, Sociolinguistics, Chinese, Foreign Countries
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