Exposure-independent comprehension of Greek-accented speech: evidence from New Zealand listeners
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
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2023. 6-10 Paper presented at 20th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPhS), Prague, Czech Republic.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
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TY - CONF
T1 - Exposure-independent comprehension of Greek-accented speech: evidence from New Zealand listeners
AU - Cooper, Stephanie
AU - Cooper, Sarah
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Accents provide extensive variation in speech, which can cause difficulties for comprehension. However, after a period of exposure to a foreign accent, listeners are usually able to understand it better. This study examined whether New Zealanders could adapt to consider Greek-accented raised /ɪ/ in English as part of their native centralised /ɪ/ phonetic category. Participants listened to a story in either Greek-accented or New Zealand-accented speech, and then underwent a cross-modal priming and lexical decision task as well as a rating task to examine perception at different levels of speech processing. Participants correctly identified words in Greek-accented English whether they had previous exposure to the accent or not. This effect extended throughout the speech processing system, fromautomatic lexical activation to deliberate categorisation. We discuss reasons for these results, including perceptual flexibility for variant forms of vowels and a high level of familiarity New Zealanders have with the Australian accent
AB - Accents provide extensive variation in speech, which can cause difficulties for comprehension. However, after a period of exposure to a foreign accent, listeners are usually able to understand it better. This study examined whether New Zealanders could adapt to consider Greek-accented raised /ɪ/ in English as part of their native centralised /ɪ/ phonetic category. Participants listened to a story in either Greek-accented or New Zealand-accented speech, and then underwent a cross-modal priming and lexical decision task as well as a rating task to examine perception at different levels of speech processing. Participants correctly identified words in Greek-accented English whether they had previous exposure to the accent or not. This effect extended throughout the speech processing system, fromautomatic lexical activation to deliberate categorisation. We discuss reasons for these results, including perceptual flexibility for variant forms of vowels and a high level of familiarity New Zealanders have with the Australian accent
KW - Speech perception
KW - perceptual learning
KW - , accent comprehension
KW - dual mapping
M3 - Paper
SP - 6
EP - 10
T2 - 20th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPhS)
Y2 - 7 August 2023 through 11 August 2023
ER -