Formalising phonological perception: The role of voicing assimilation in consonant cluster perception in Emilian dialects

Speech perception is influenced by language-specific phonological knowledge. While phonotactics has long been established to play a role, the study of how phonological alternations influence perception is still in its infancy. In this paper, we make a case for the latter by investigating the role of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of linguistics 2024-04, Vol.60 (2), p.253-284
Hauptverfasser: CAVIRANI, EDOARDO, HAMANN, SILKE
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description Speech perception is influenced by language-specific phonological knowledge. While phonotactics has long been established to play a role, the study of how phonological alternations influence perception is still in its infancy. In this paper, we make a case for the latter by investigating the role of regressive voicing assimilation (RVA) in the perception of obstruent clusters in Emilian dialects of Italian. We provide empirical evidence from a phoneme-detection task, in which Emilian listeners reported to have heard [b] significantly more often in stimuli with a /p/ before a voiced obstruent (RVA context) than before a vowel (non-RVA context). Our experimental findings add to recent work on the influence of phonology on speech perception. In addition, we provide an explicit formalisation, which bolsters the need for a rigid distinction between phonetic, surface and underlying representation, and an explicit mapping between all three, both in the process of speech production and comprehension.
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subjects Comprehension
Consonant clusters
Dialects
Emilian
Gallo-Romance languages
Infancy
Influence
Listeners
Mapping
Obstruents
Phonemes
Phonetics
Phonological assimilation
Phonology
Phonotactics
Speech
Speech perception
Speech production
Voicing
Vowels
title Formalising phonological perception: The role of voicing assimilation in consonant cluster perception in Emilian dialects
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