Jim Flege’s research on category formation has introduced or emphasized several key concepts, including equivalence classification and the distinction between new and similar phones. The research described in this chapter addresses these concepts by investigating the role of acoustic variability in the formation of new categories as well as the extent to which this variability may hinder or help native and non-native listeners. A production study comparing Spanish-accented and native English vowels reveals a much greater degree of variability in nonnatives’ use of the English vowel space. Results from a subsequent training study where vowel variability was systematically manipulated, suggests that for the most easily maintained distinctions, learning benefited from the high-variability training paradigm. In contrast, for very difficult distinctions, advantages were found for training only with minimal variability (prototypes). Finally, results are presented from a lexical decision task in which English and Dutch listeners responded to native and Dutch-accented English. While Americans prefer native English speech, the Dutch prefer the Dutch-accented stimuli. In addition, Dutch listeners are less efficient in processing words containing sounds that do not occur in Dutch even when listening to a native English speaker
2023. Conflicting standards and variability: Spirantization in two varieties of Uruguayan Spanish. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics 16:2 ► pp. 397 ff.
Williams, Rachel, Victor S. Ferreira & Iva Ivanova
2022. Effects of native language and habituation in phonetic accommodation. Journal of Phonetics 93 ► pp. 101148 ff.
WIENER, SETH, MARJORIE K. M. CHAN & KIWAKO ITO
2020. Do Explicit Instruction and High Variability Phonetic Training Improve Nonnative Speakers’ Mandarin Tone Productions?. The Modern Language Journal 104:1 ► pp. 152 ff.
2012. Toddlers recognize words in an unfamiliar accent after brief exposure. Developmental Science 15:6 ► pp. 732 ff.
SCHMALE, RACHEL, GEORGE HOLLICH & AMANDA SEIDL
2011. Contending with foreign accent in early word learning*. Journal of Child Language 38:5 ► pp. 1096 ff.
Schmale, Rachel, Alejandrina Cristià, Amanda Seidl & Elizabeth K. Johnson
2010. Developmental Changes in Infants’ Ability to Cope with Dialect Variation in Word Recognition. Infancy 15:6 ► pp. 650 ff.
Van Engen, Kristin J., Melissa Baese-Berk, Rachel E. Baker, Arim Choi, Midam Kim & Ann R. Bradlow
2010. The Wildcat Corpus of Native-and Foreign-accented English: Communicative Efficiency across Conversational Dyads with Varying Language Alignment Profiles. Language and Speech 53:4 ► pp. 510 ff.
Schmale, Rachel & Amanda Seidl
2009. Accommodating variability in voice and foreign accent: flexibility of early word representations. Developmental Science 12:4 ► pp. 583 ff.
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