This study investigates English and Korean speakers productions of English voiceless stops to examine whether lexical stress and prosodic domain affect length of voice onset time (VOT). From voiceless stops in four phonological environments, i.e., word-initial/stressed, word-initial/unstressed, word-medial/stressed and word-medial/unstressed, the length of VOT was measured to examine if English and Korean speakers speech differed in patterns of VOT realization. It was observed that Korean speaker s VOT production was different from that of English speakers with respect to both lexical stress and prosodic domain. First, the difference between VOT values for the stops in stressed and unstressed syllables was greater for Korean speakers. This ...
This study examines the effects of prosodic boundaries, lexical stress, and phrasal accent on the ac...
Objectives: The present study examines whether Korean children and adults who have learned English a...
Unlike some Asian languages (e.g., Korean), English has lexical stress manifested by four acoustic ...
This paper aims to investigate whether place of articulation (POA) has an influence on the productio...
The present study investigates native Korean speakers production of English unaspirated stops in th...
The current study investigated how tonal and non-tonal dialect speakers of Korean perceived the voic...
The present study examines phonetic characteristics of Korean L2 learners, when they study English a...
The use of phonetic correlates of Korean stops was found to be different among different dialect spe...
This study investigated how the L1 phonetics-prosody interface transfers to L2 by examining prosodic...
As is known, the fundamental frequencies (F0) of the vowels following aspirated or lenis stops have ...
Despite abundant evidence of malleability in speech production, previous studies of the effects of l...
This study investigated L1 interference in the perception of released word-final stops in English by...
This thesis investigates the following research questions: (1) Does Korean have a metrical structure...
The purpose of this thesis is to find the reason why attaining nativelike pronunciation is difficult...
This paper investigates the domain of two aspects of laryngeal features (voicing and voicing onset t...
This study examines the effects of prosodic boundaries, lexical stress, and phrasal accent on the ac...
Objectives: The present study examines whether Korean children and adults who have learned English a...
Unlike some Asian languages (e.g., Korean), English has lexical stress manifested by four acoustic ...
This paper aims to investigate whether place of articulation (POA) has an influence on the productio...
The present study investigates native Korean speakers production of English unaspirated stops in th...
The current study investigated how tonal and non-tonal dialect speakers of Korean perceived the voic...
The present study examines phonetic characteristics of Korean L2 learners, when they study English a...
The use of phonetic correlates of Korean stops was found to be different among different dialect spe...
This study investigated how the L1 phonetics-prosody interface transfers to L2 by examining prosodic...
As is known, the fundamental frequencies (F0) of the vowels following aspirated or lenis stops have ...
Despite abundant evidence of malleability in speech production, previous studies of the effects of l...
This study investigated L1 interference in the perception of released word-final stops in English by...
This thesis investigates the following research questions: (1) Does Korean have a metrical structure...
The purpose of this thesis is to find the reason why attaining nativelike pronunciation is difficult...
This paper investigates the domain of two aspects of laryngeal features (voicing and voicing onset t...
This study examines the effects of prosodic boundaries, lexical stress, and phrasal accent on the ac...
Objectives: The present study examines whether Korean children and adults who have learned English a...
Unlike some Asian languages (e.g., Korean), English has lexical stress manifested by four acoustic ...