The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish

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Standard

The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish. / Morris, David Jackson; Juul, Holger.

I: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Bind 152, Nr. 5, 2022, s. 2953-2961.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Morris, DJ & Juul, H 2022, 'The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish', The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, bind 152, nr. 5, s. 2953-2961. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0015145

APA

Morris, D. J., & Juul, H. (2022). The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 152(5), 2953-2961. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0015145

Vancouver

Morris DJ, Juul H. The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2022;152(5):2953-2961. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0015145

Author

Morris, David Jackson ; Juul, Holger. / The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish. I: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2022 ; Bind 152, Nr. 5. s. 2953-2961.

Bibtex

@article{c98018ec7b2c441eb9db341fc590acec,
title = "The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish",
abstract = "Danish is a quantity language in which the length of vowels is either short or long. This study investigates vowel length in order to determine the degree to which we can ascribe the conventional categorical tag to vowel quantity perception. In a pilot study (n = 18) the gradual shortening of long vowels was identified as methodologically preferable for deriving stimuli continua, as complete identification functions could be fitted to the mean data. We employed this method to derive stimuli for identification and discrimination experiments (n = 32) that included the words used in the pilot and another word pair. This pair has phonetically similar variation in vowel duration although, due to recent language change, quantity is no longer contrastive. Results from the phonologically contrastive word pairs showed sigmoidal identification functions and discrimination peaks in the middle of the continua, while the identification slope for the non-contrastive pair was approximately linear and there was no clear discrimination peak. These differences show that the perception of speech contrasts is influenced by the linguistic experience of listeners as well as auditory and articulatory factors.",
author = "Morris, {David Jackson} and Holger Juul",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1121/10.0015145",
language = "English",
volume = "152",
pages = "2953--2961",
journal = "Acoustical Society of America. Journal",
issn = "0001-4966",
publisher = "A I P Publishing LLC",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The long and the short of vowel length perception in Danish

AU - Morris, David Jackson

AU - Juul, Holger

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Danish is a quantity language in which the length of vowels is either short or long. This study investigates vowel length in order to determine the degree to which we can ascribe the conventional categorical tag to vowel quantity perception. In a pilot study (n = 18) the gradual shortening of long vowels was identified as methodologically preferable for deriving stimuli continua, as complete identification functions could be fitted to the mean data. We employed this method to derive stimuli for identification and discrimination experiments (n = 32) that included the words used in the pilot and another word pair. This pair has phonetically similar variation in vowel duration although, due to recent language change, quantity is no longer contrastive. Results from the phonologically contrastive word pairs showed sigmoidal identification functions and discrimination peaks in the middle of the continua, while the identification slope for the non-contrastive pair was approximately linear and there was no clear discrimination peak. These differences show that the perception of speech contrasts is influenced by the linguistic experience of listeners as well as auditory and articulatory factors.

AB - Danish is a quantity language in which the length of vowels is either short or long. This study investigates vowel length in order to determine the degree to which we can ascribe the conventional categorical tag to vowel quantity perception. In a pilot study (n = 18) the gradual shortening of long vowels was identified as methodologically preferable for deriving stimuli continua, as complete identification functions could be fitted to the mean data. We employed this method to derive stimuli for identification and discrimination experiments (n = 32) that included the words used in the pilot and another word pair. This pair has phonetically similar variation in vowel duration although, due to recent language change, quantity is no longer contrastive. Results from the phonologically contrastive word pairs showed sigmoidal identification functions and discrimination peaks in the middle of the continua, while the identification slope for the non-contrastive pair was approximately linear and there was no clear discrimination peak. These differences show that the perception of speech contrasts is influenced by the linguistic experience of listeners as well as auditory and articulatory factors.

U2 - 10.1121/10.0015145

DO - 10.1121/10.0015145

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36456265

VL - 152

SP - 2953

EP - 2961

JO - Acoustical Society of America. Journal

JF - Acoustical Society of America. Journal

SN - 0001-4966

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 323612232