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      Prosodic location modulates listener’s perception of novel German sounds

      1 , 2
      Laboratory Phonology
      Open Library of the Humanities

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          Abstract

          Interaction of sounds on the melodic tier (segments) with prosodic and phonotactic structure (syllabic context) in cross-language perception is not explicitly addressed by models of second language phonology (e.g., Perceptual Assimilation Model: Best, 1995). At initial stages of foreign language exposure, learners rely on position-specific phonetic detail more than native speakers or advanced learners, thus mappings according to prosodic and phonotactic context are a crucial factor in early interlanguage phonological development. In a perceptual assimilation experiment, we manipulated syllable position (onset vs. coda) and phonotactic complexity (simple vs. complex codas) in phonotactically similar languages for auditory presentation of six German obstruents (i.e., familiar [h k ʃ] and novel [ç x p͡f]) to native speakers of American English who had no previous exposure to German. By means of weighted proportions (Park & de Jong, 2008) and overlap scores (Levy, 2009), we found that [h k ʃ p͡f] mapped categorically to English orthographic categories <h>, <k>, <sh>, and <f>, respectively, in all positions, whereas the novel fricatives [ç x] exhibited distinct mapping patterns from each other, from other sounds, and according to syllable position. These results demonstrate profound influences of both low-level prosodic and phonotactic contexts on perceptual assimilation of novel sounds

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Laboratory Phonology
                Open Library of the Humanities
                1868-6354
                January 8 2023
                May 20 2023
                : 14
                : 1
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Calgary
                [2 ]Indiana University
                Article
                10.16995/labphon.6428
                0a7524c0-b108-45f5-911d-1ef98c673a79
                © 2023

                https://example.org

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