Interspeech 2016 2016
DOI: 10.21437/interspeech.2016-954
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L1-L2 Interference: The Case of Final Devoicing of French Voiced Fricatives in Final Position by German Learners

Abstract: This work is dealing with a case of L1-L2 interference in language learning. The Germans learning French as a second language frequently produce unvoiced fricatives in word-final position instead of the expected voiced fricatives. We investigated the production of French fricatives for 16 non-native (8 beginner-and 8 advanced-learners) and 8 native speakers, and designed auditory feedback to help them realize the right voicing feature. The productions of all speakers were categorized either as voiced or unvoic… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…However, this requires to reduce the duration of the fricative, since B is very unstable. Our acoustic measurements 45 show that some French speakers (approximately one third for postalveolar fricatives) sustain voicing for the whole fricative even in a final position. This corresponds to one of these two strategies.…”
Section: Since the Boundary Between The Voiced And Unvoiced Regimes Is Almost Vowel Independentmentioning
confidence: 64%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, this requires to reduce the duration of the fricative, since B is very unstable. Our acoustic measurements 45 show that some French speakers (approximately one third for postalveolar fricatives) sustain voicing for the whole fricative even in a final position. This corresponds to one of these two strategies.…”
Section: Since the Boundary Between The Voiced And Unvoiced Regimes Is Almost Vowel Independentmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…Our simulations give a new point of view about strategies available to implement the voice/unvoiced contrasts of fricatives. Here we exploit the results of our simulations together with the observations of French speakers and German learners of French 45 . In this previous work dedicated to language learning we recorded sentences with voiced fricatives in a word final position uttered by French and German speakers, and the same words (in an isolated condition) by French speakers to investigate voicing without the influence of the initial vowel of the next word.…”
Section: Discussion In Regards To Articulatory Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, to facilitate the perception and production of fricatives of the learners, we propose a novel framework that incorporates a correction method which substitutes the erroneous devoiced fricative with voiced one using TD-PSOLA [10], and also the energy of the replacement fricative was adjusted w.r.t. the preceding vowels of the learner and teacher.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The voicing during the fricative segment is found as the dominant cue for the listeners' voicing decision [14], though the scope of this paper is beyond the debate of incompleteness of voicing neutralization [15]. The fricative duration cue plays a significant perceptual role to distinguish between voiced and voiceless fricatives, and also lengthening the duration of the preceding vowel of the word-final fricative is an effective technique to produce a voiced fricative [16,10]. Low-frequency energy was included as a successful measure of voicing during the frication by a series of works [17,18]; here a spectrum over the whole frication noise was computed, and then the amplitude of the components below 500 Hz was measured.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These observations open new perspectives for understanding the strategies available to implement the voice/unvoiced contrasts of fricatives, or for explaining some phenomena, such as the final fricative devoicing [11][12][13]. In order to complete the numerical observations, this paper aims at experimentally verifying the existence of such an unstable zone in fricatives, and also the existence of these potential different strategies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%