This study explores the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying prosodic focus. Theories of intonational phonology, syntax, and phonetics make different predictions as to which focus location would be the most challenging to the native listener. Lexical pitch accent further complicates this picture. In a sentence with mixed pitch accent conditions (e.g. Unaccented-Accented-Unaccented), the lexical accent would naturally stand out as more prominent than the unaccented words in terms of modifications to the F0 contour, thus potentially resembling focus. A focus identification task was conducted with 16 native listeners from the Greater Tokyo area. Natural and synthetic stimuli were played to the listeners who t...
This paper studies the influence of prosodic features, con-text, and word order on the identificatio...
We investigated how focus was prosodically realized in Taiwanese, Taiwan Mandarin and Beijing Mandar...
IntroductionSpeech communication is multi-sensory in nature. Seeing a speaker’s head and face moveme...
This study explores the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying pros...
This journal issue contain abstracts of the 5th ASA/ASJ Joint MeetingThis study explores the context...
This study explored the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying pros...
This study explored the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying pros...
Japanese is a pitch accent language where lexical items are divided into two groups: Accented (A) an...
This paper discusses how focus change s prosodic structure in Tokyo Japanese. It is generally believ...
250 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.This thesis investigates how ...
International audienceIn English and Japanese, the information-structural notion of contrastive focu...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The study describes the characteristics of phonological intonation on focus utterances in Japanese. ...
We naively believe that L1 is easier to hear than L2. Generally, this belief is correct, but not alw...
This paper studies the influence of prosodic features, con-text, and word order on the identificatio...
We investigated how focus was prosodically realized in Taiwanese, Taiwan Mandarin and Beijing Mandar...
IntroductionSpeech communication is multi-sensory in nature. Seeing a speaker’s head and face moveme...
This study explores the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying pros...
This journal issue contain abstracts of the 5th ASA/ASJ Joint MeetingThis study explores the context...
This study explored the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying pros...
This study explored the contexts in which native Japanese listeners have difficulty identifying pros...
Japanese is a pitch accent language where lexical items are divided into two groups: Accented (A) an...
This paper discusses how focus change s prosodic structure in Tokyo Japanese. It is generally believ...
250 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.This thesis investigates how ...
International audienceIn English and Japanese, the information-structural notion of contrastive focu...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The fact that “purely” prosodic marking of focus may be weaker in some languages than in others, and...
The study describes the characteristics of phonological intonation on focus utterances in Japanese. ...
We naively believe that L1 is easier to hear than L2. Generally, this belief is correct, but not alw...
This paper studies the influence of prosodic features, con-text, and word order on the identificatio...
We investigated how focus was prosodically realized in Taiwanese, Taiwan Mandarin and Beijing Mandar...
IntroductionSpeech communication is multi-sensory in nature. Seeing a speaker’s head and face moveme...