Syllable-onset /l / in British English is longer and often has different (usually lower) F2 frequency before a voiced coda. Five experiments explore the perceptual power of these properties and of f0. In each experiment, listeners identified as led or let synthetic syllables whose latter half was replaced by noise. The most reliable cue was /l / duration; F2 frequency in the /l / was influential mainly when the vowel quality was held constant. However, listeners learn which cues are most effective, and some choose /l / duration rather than spectral properties relatively late in the procedure. The results support word recognition models with non-segmental lexical representation that is sensitive to systematic variation in phonetic fine detai...
Does experience with a perceptual cue for a phoneme contrast in the native language affect its use i...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Native and nonnative listeners categorized final /v/ versus /f/ in English nonwords. Fricatives foll...
International audienceProperties of syllable onset /l/ that depend on the voicing of the syllable co...
This study investigates durational and spectral variation in syllable-onset /l/s dependent on voicin...
This study investigated how coda voicing contrast in English would be phonetically encoded in the te...
When codas and vowels are cross-spliced, vowels originally produced with voiced codas are perceived ...
Information in speech does not unfold discretely over time; perceptual cues are gradient and overlap...
Information in speech does not unfold discretely over time; perceptual cues are gradient and overlap...
The relationship between vowel duration and word-final voicing in English is well attested. In a min...
Languages tend to license segmental contrasts where they are maximally perceptible, i.e. where more ...
rate of a sentence context affects the identification of synthetic vowels, even if the vowel contras...
Listeners of different languages have been reported to vary significantly in prominence perception t...
The study of second language speech perception usually put L1-L2 phonological mapping as the rule of...
This study investigated how coda voicing contrast in English would be phonetically encoded in the te...
Does experience with a perceptual cue for a phoneme contrast in the native language affect its use i...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Native and nonnative listeners categorized final /v/ versus /f/ in English nonwords. Fricatives foll...
International audienceProperties of syllable onset /l/ that depend on the voicing of the syllable co...
This study investigates durational and spectral variation in syllable-onset /l/s dependent on voicin...
This study investigated how coda voicing contrast in English would be phonetically encoded in the te...
When codas and vowels are cross-spliced, vowels originally produced with voiced codas are perceived ...
Information in speech does not unfold discretely over time; perceptual cues are gradient and overlap...
Information in speech does not unfold discretely over time; perceptual cues are gradient and overlap...
The relationship between vowel duration and word-final voicing in English is well attested. In a min...
Languages tend to license segmental contrasts where they are maximally perceptible, i.e. where more ...
rate of a sentence context affects the identification of synthetic vowels, even if the vowel contras...
Listeners of different languages have been reported to vary significantly in prominence perception t...
The study of second language speech perception usually put L1-L2 phonological mapping as the rule of...
This study investigated how coda voicing contrast in English would be phonetically encoded in the te...
Does experience with a perceptual cue for a phoneme contrast in the native language affect its use i...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Native and nonnative listeners categorized final /v/ versus /f/ in English nonwords. Fricatives foll...