1989
DOI: 10.1016/s0095-4470(19)30445-0
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Perception of consonant length: voiceless stops in Turkish and Bengali

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Cited by 54 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…The measures were made using waveform and spectrographic displays generated by PRAAT acoustic analysis software (version 4.4.30; Boersma and Weenink, 2006). The segmentation procedures described below followed those described by prior studies (Peterson and Lehiste, 1960;Klatt, 1976;Lahiri and Hankamer, 1988;Hankamer et al, 1989;Ham, 2001) and applied to the measurement of Japanese stop sounds by Idemaru and Guion (2008) and Idemaru and Guion-Anderson (2010).…”
Section: Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The measures were made using waveform and spectrographic displays generated by PRAAT acoustic analysis software (version 4.4.30; Boersma and Weenink, 2006). The segmentation procedures described below followed those described by prior studies (Peterson and Lehiste, 1960;Klatt, 1976;Lahiri and Hankamer, 1988;Hankamer et al, 1989;Ham, 2001) and applied to the measurement of Japanese stop sounds by Idemaru and Guion (2008) and Idemaru and Guion-Anderson (2010).…”
Section: Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perception of quantity is also affected by factors other than the duration of the segment in question, as shown by many previous studies (e.g. [13] for Bengali, [9,10] for Finnish). Preceding vowel duration has been reported to affect geminate perception in several languages [14], in ways matching their production patterns, e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…One reason to use Tashlhiyt as the target language (other than the fact that French listeners are unlikely to have been exposed to Tashlhiyt) is that singleton-geminate contrasts in this language are almost exclusively marked by duration differences (Ridouane, 2007 ), which are directly relevant to quantity distinctions. Although the primary acoustic cue to gemination is always duration (Lahiri and Hankamer, 1988 ; Hankamer et al, 1989 ; Ridouane, 2010 ), there are some languages in which other phonetic or prosodic cues participate in the distinction between geminate and single consonants: for example, accentual cues in Pattani Malay (Abramson, 1986 ), VOT differences in Cypriot Greek (Armosti, 2009 ), following vowel quality differences in Japanese (Kawahara, 2006 ). Because we address here the issue of the perception of nonnative consonant duration quantity contrasts, a target language such as Tashlhiyt, for which the possible confounds with other dimensions than duration are minimized, is highly desirable.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%