This paper aims at verifying to what extent the simulation of different emotions can be employed in L2-German pronunciation training addressed to adult Italian learners. Experimental data on the phonetic characteristics of learners’ emotional speech are investigated with regard to specific aspects of the learners’ interlanguage. It can be hypothesized that a knowledge of the difficulties native speakers of Italian have to cope with when they learn German and of the phonetic characteristics of their simulated emotional speech, can be combined in L2-pronunciation training in order to promote correct L2 phonetic acquisition and to eliminate the so-called foreign accent
In the study of acoustic correlates of emotions, there is general agreement about a correlation betw...
L’espressione e la percezione degli stati emotivi in una lingua diversa dalla propria rappresenta un...
Most contrastive descriptions of German and Italian are dominated by a phonematic perspective. They...
This paper aims at verifying to what extent the simulation of different emotions can be employed in ...
This study explores the expression of vocal emotions by Russian, Spanish and Tunisian learners of L2...
This study explored the expression and the perception of vocal emotions in L2 learners of Italian (R...
This article experimentally investigates the similarities and the differences between German and Ita...
This study explored the expression and the perception of vocal emotions in L2 learners of Italian co...
This paper presents the Contrastive Prosody Method (CPM), a prosody-centred pronunciation training m...
This study investigates the role of perception and sensory motor learning on speech production in L2...
In learning a foreign language, the adult learner encounters great difficulties due to the already b...
This paper is focused on the strategies of acquisition of Italian stops in L2 Italian by three Germa...
Italian speakers tend to stress the second component of German morphologically complex words such as...
This paper presents a prosody-centred pronunciation training method specifically addressed to Italia...
This article shows how it is possible to implement Lewis\u2019 Lexical Approach in L2 phonetic cours...
In the study of acoustic correlates of emotions, there is general agreement about a correlation betw...
L’espressione e la percezione degli stati emotivi in una lingua diversa dalla propria rappresenta un...
Most contrastive descriptions of German and Italian are dominated by a phonematic perspective. They...
This paper aims at verifying to what extent the simulation of different emotions can be employed in ...
This study explores the expression of vocal emotions by Russian, Spanish and Tunisian learners of L2...
This study explored the expression and the perception of vocal emotions in L2 learners of Italian (R...
This article experimentally investigates the similarities and the differences between German and Ita...
This study explored the expression and the perception of vocal emotions in L2 learners of Italian co...
This paper presents the Contrastive Prosody Method (CPM), a prosody-centred pronunciation training m...
This study investigates the role of perception and sensory motor learning on speech production in L2...
In learning a foreign language, the adult learner encounters great difficulties due to the already b...
This paper is focused on the strategies of acquisition of Italian stops in L2 Italian by three Germa...
Italian speakers tend to stress the second component of German morphologically complex words such as...
This paper presents a prosody-centred pronunciation training method specifically addressed to Italia...
This article shows how it is possible to implement Lewis\u2019 Lexical Approach in L2 phonetic cours...
In the study of acoustic correlates of emotions, there is general agreement about a correlation betw...
L’espressione e la percezione degli stati emotivi in una lingua diversa dalla propria rappresenta un...
Most contrastive descriptions of German and Italian are dominated by a phonematic perspective. They...