This study investigates two issues: the effect of bilingualism (Greek/Australian-English) on speakers' ability to perceive unfamiliar speech contrasts (in this case Thai); and whether speakers' speech productions bear any relationship to their speech perception. Thai has three bilabial stop contrasts in word-initial position, voiced /b/, voiceless /p/ and voiceless aspirated /ph/. English and Greek both have two-way voicing distinctions, voiced /b/ and voiceless /p/, but in the wordinitial position in English, /p/ is realized as an aspirated [ph] and only occurs as an unaspirated [p] when in other than the initial position. Experiment 1 examined the perception of Thai bilabial stops by monolingual Australian-English speakers, bilingual Gree...
Speech production research has demonstrated that the first language (L1) often interferes with produ...
Speech production research has demonstrated that the first language (L1) often interferes with produ...
The present investigation reports the conditions that propel bilinguals’ double phonemic boundary, a...
The way that bilinguals produce and perceive phonetic contrasts in each of their languages is though...
The primary aim of this study was to determine whether late French/English bilinguals are able to ut...
Monolingual listeners are constrained by native language experience when categorizing and discrimina...
This study examined Australian English (AE) and Thai–English bilingual (TE) speakers’ ability to per...
How listeners categorize two phones predicts the success with which they will discriminate the given...
The way that bilinguals produce phones in each of their languages provides a window into the nature ...
The way that bilinguals produce phones in each of their languages provides a window into the nature ...
This study examined Australian English speakers’ and Thai-English bilingual speakers’ ability to per...
This study examines the discrimination of words ending with voiceless stops / p t k/ in first langua...
This study examined the discrimination of word-final stop contrasts (/p/-/t/, /p/-/k/, /t/-/k/) in E...
This study examined the discrimination of word-final stop contrasts (/p/-/t/, /p/-/k/, /t/-/k/) in E...
This study examined the voice onset time (VOT) of Greek and English voiceless stops (/p/, /t/, /k/) ...
Speech production research has demonstrated that the first language (L1) often interferes with produ...
Speech production research has demonstrated that the first language (L1) often interferes with produ...
The present investigation reports the conditions that propel bilinguals’ double phonemic boundary, a...
The way that bilinguals produce and perceive phonetic contrasts in each of their languages is though...
The primary aim of this study was to determine whether late French/English bilinguals are able to ut...
Monolingual listeners are constrained by native language experience when categorizing and discrimina...
This study examined Australian English (AE) and Thai–English bilingual (TE) speakers’ ability to per...
How listeners categorize two phones predicts the success with which they will discriminate the given...
The way that bilinguals produce phones in each of their languages provides a window into the nature ...
The way that bilinguals produce phones in each of their languages provides a window into the nature ...
This study examined Australian English speakers’ and Thai-English bilingual speakers’ ability to per...
This study examines the discrimination of words ending with voiceless stops / p t k/ in first langua...
This study examined the discrimination of word-final stop contrasts (/p/-/t/, /p/-/k/, /t/-/k/) in E...
This study examined the discrimination of word-final stop contrasts (/p/-/t/, /p/-/k/, /t/-/k/) in E...
This study examined the voice onset time (VOT) of Greek and English voiceless stops (/p/, /t/, /k/) ...
Speech production research has demonstrated that the first language (L1) often interferes with produ...
Speech production research has demonstrated that the first language (L1) often interferes with produ...
The present investigation reports the conditions that propel bilinguals’ double phonemic boundary, a...