Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1100834 | Journal of Phonetics | 2010 | 9 Pages |
Previous research on categorical perception of pitch contours has mainly considered the contrast between tone language and non-tone language listeners. This study investigates not only the influence of tone language vs. non-tone language experience (German vs. Chinese), but also the influence of different tone inventories (Mandarin tones vs. Cantonese tones), on the categorical perception of pitch contours. The results show that the positions of the identification boundaries do not differ significantly across the 3 groups of listeners, i.e., Mandarin, Cantonese, and German, but that the boundary widths do differ significantly between tone language (Mandarin and Cantonese) listeners and non-tone language (German) listeners, with broader boundary widths for non-tone language listeners. In the discrimination tasks, the German listeners exhibit only psychophysical boundaries, whereas Chinese listeners exhibit linguistic boundaries, and these linguistic boundaries are further shaped by the different tone inventories.
Research Highlights► Categorical effect is stronger for native tone language listeners. ► Categorical effect is stronger in speech context for native tone language listeners. ► The sensitivity to the pitch-contour change is shaped by the relevant tone contrasts.