The role of lexical context and language experience in the perception of foreign-accented segments
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2023-07-26Metadatos
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Poznan Studies in Contemporary Linguistics 59(3) : 609-634 (2023)
Resumen
When faced with intelligibility problems, listeners resort to contextual
information. The present study explores the use of lexical context by listeners when
identifying segments with various degrees of foreign accent. Native English listeners
identified words into which a single Spanish-accented segment from a 5-step continuum
had been inserted. Listeners also identified vowel-consonant or consonantvowel
sequences containing the same accented segments. While lexical context
helped, the lexical advantage was largely independent of degree of foreign accent,
with a slight benefit only for the most accented consonants. To examine the influence
of listeners’ first language on the usefulness of lexical context, a second experiment
was carried out with Spanish, Japanese and Czech non-native listeners. As was the
case for native listeners, there was little evidence that a lexical context helps more
for foreign-accented than native segments. Normalised for word familiarity, overall
non-native identification patterns were comparable to native listeners’ perceptions.
Listeners’ first language phonetic inventory had an effect on identification levels,
particularly in the case of vowels. Lexical context benefits for vowel identification
can be explained by their generally less categorical processing, their realisational
variability in English, and symbol mapping issues