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The effect of L1 prosodic backgrounds of Cantonese and Japanese speakers on the perception of Mandarin tones after training
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2005
Year
Second Language LearningSpeech SciencesHong Kong CantoneseLanguage DevelopmentPitch Accent LanguageLanguage LearningPhonologyLanguage ProficiencySecond Language AcquisitionTone LanguagePhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesMandarin LanguageAcoustic AnalysisJapanese SpeakersHealth SciencesSpeech ProductionProsody (Linguistics)Speech AcousticSpeech CommunicationBilingual PhonologyMandarin TonesSpeech AcousticsSpeech ProcessingSpeech PerceptionForeign Language AcquisitionLinguisticsL1 Prosodic Backgrounds
The present study investigated to what extent ones’ L1 prosodic backgrounds affect their learning of a new tonal system. The question as to whether native speakers of a tone language perform differently from those of a pitch accent language will be addressed. Twenty native speakers of Hong Kong Cantonese (a tone language) and Japanese (a pitch accent language) were assigned to two groups. All of them had had no prior knowledge of Mandarin, and had never received any form of musical training before they participated in the study. Their performance of the identification of Mandarin tones before and after a short-term training was compared. Analysis of listeners’ tonal confusions in the pretest, posttest, and generalization tests revealed that both Cantonese and Japanese listeners had more confusion for two contrastive tone pairs: Tone 1–Tone 4, and Tone 2–Tone 3. Moreover, Cantonese speakers consistently had greater difficulty than Japanese speakers in distinguishing the tones in each pair. These imply that listeners L1 prosodic backgrounds are at work during the process of learning a new tonal system. The findings will be further discussed in terms of the Perceptual Assimilation Model (Best, 1995). [Work supported by SSHRC.]