Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1101045 Journal of Phonetics 2011 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this study, we compare the effects of English lexical features on word duration for native and non-native English speakers and for non-native speakers with different L1s and a range of L2 experience. We also examine whether non-native word durations lead to judgments of a stronger foreign accent. We measured word durations in English paragraphs read by 12 American English (AE), 20 Korean, and 20 Chinese speakers. We also had AE listeners rate the ‘accentedness’ of these non-native speakers. AE speech had shorter durations, greater within-speaker word duration variance, greater reduction of function words, and less between-speaker variance than non-native speech. However, both AE and non-native speakers showed sensitivity to lexical predictability by reducing second mentions and high-frequency words. Non-native speakers with more native-like word durations, greater within-speaker word duration variance, and greater function word reduction were perceived as less accented. Overall, these findings identify word duration as an important and complex feature of foreign-accented English.

Research highlights► We compared word durations in native and nonnative (Korean and Chinese) English. ► Native and nonnative word durations affected by predictability (frequency and mention). ► Nonnative word durations were longer and showed less within-speaker variance. ► Natives had greater function word reduction and frequency effects. ► Less accented nonnatives had greater function word reduction and word durations variance.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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