An acoustic analysis of American English liquids by adults and children: Native English speakers and native Japanese speakers of English

This study investigated acoustic characteristics of American English liquids produced by native English (NE) and native Japanese (NJ) speakers reported in Aoyama, Flege, Guion, Akahane-Yamada, and Yamada [(2004). J. Phonetics 32, 233-250]. For a larger longitudinal study, the data were collected twi...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2019-10, Vol.146 (4), p.2671-2681
Hauptverfasser: Aoyama, Katsura, Flege, James E, Akahane-Yamada, Reiko, Yamada, Tsuneo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study investigated acoustic characteristics of American English liquids produced by native English (NE) and native Japanese (NJ) speakers reported in Aoyama, Flege, Guion, Akahane-Yamada, and Yamada [(2004). J. Phonetics 32, 233-250]. For a larger longitudinal study, the data were collected twice to investigate the acquisition of American English by the NJ speakers (Time 1, Time 2). Aoyama, Flege, Guion, Akahane-Yamada, and Yamada [(2004). J. Phonetics 32, 233-250] evaluated productions of /l/ and /ɹ/ in the NE and NJ adults and children (16 participants each) using NE speakers' perceptual judgments and showed that the NJ children's production of /ɹ/ improved from Time 1 to Time 2. In the current study, four acoustic parameters (duration, F1, F2, and F3) were measured in 256 tokens each of English /l/ and /ɹ/. Results showed that some acoustic parameters, such as F2, changed from Time 1 to Time 2 in the NJ speakers' productions, indicating improvements. However, the NJ speakers' productions were different from the NE speakers' productions in almost all acoustic parameters at both Time 1 and Time 2. Results suggest that the improvements in the NJ children's productions of /ɹ/ reported in Aoyama, Flege, Guion, Akahane-Yamada, and Yamada [(2004). J. Phonetics 32, 233-250] were due to a combination of changes, not due to a change in one acoustic parameter such as F3 in /ɹ/.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.5130574