School of Languages and Linguistics - Research Publications

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    Discrimination of Multiple Coronal Stop Contrasts in Wubuy (Australia): A Natural Referent Consonant Account
    Bundgaard-Nielsen, RL ; Baker, BJ ; Kroos, CH ; Harvey, M ; Best, CT ; Schiller, NO (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2015-12-03)
    Native speech perception is generally assumed to be highly efficient and accurate. Very little research has, however, directly examined the limitations of native perception, especially for contrasts that are only minimally differentiated acoustically and articulatorily. Here, we demonstrate that native speech perception may indeed be more difficult than is often assumed, where phonemes are highly similar, and we address the nature and extremes of consonant perception. We present two studies of native and non-native (English) perception of the acoustically and articulatorily similar four-way coronal stop contrast /t ʈ [symbol: see text] ȶ/ (apico-alveolar, apico-retroflex, lamino-dental, lamino-alveopalatal) of Wubuy, an indigenous language of Australia. The results show that all listeners find contrasts involving /ȶ/ easy to discriminate, but that, for both groups, contrasts involving /t ʈ [symbol: see text]/ are much harder. Where the two groups differ, the results largely reflect native language (Wubuy vs English) attunement as predicted by the Perceptual Assimilation Model. We also observe striking perceptual asymmetries in the native listeners' perception of contrasts involving the latter three stops, likely due to the differences in input frequency. Such asymmetries have not previously been observed in adults, and we propose a novel Natural Referent Consonant Hypothesis to account for the results.
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    The Obstruent Inventory of Roper Kriol
    Baker, B ; Bundgaard-Nielsen, R ; Graetzer, S (ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2014)
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    Vowel acoustics reliably differentiate three coronal stops of Wubuy across prosodic contexts
    Bundgaard-Nielsen, RL ; Baker, BJ ; Kroos, C ; Harvey, M ; Best, CT (Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2012-01-25)
    Abstract The present study investigates the acoustic differentiation of three coronal stops in the indigenous Australian language Wubuy. We test independent claims that only VC (vowel-into-consonant) transitions provide robust acoustic cues for retroflex as compared to alveolar and dental coronal stops, with no differentiating cues among these three coronal stops evident in CV (consonant-into-vowel) transitions. The four-way stop distinction /t, t̪, ʈ, c/ in Wubuy is contrastive word-initially (Heath 1984) and by implication utterance-initially, i.e., in CV-only contexts, which suggests that acoustic differentiation should be expected to occur in the CV transitions of this language, including in initial positions. Therefore, we examined both VC and CV formant transition information in the three target coronal stops across VCV (word-internal), V#CV (word-initial but utterance-medial) and ##CV (word- and utterance-initial), for /а/ vowel contexts, which provide the optimal environment for investigating formant transitions. Results confirm that these coronal contrasts are maintained in the CVs in this vowel context, and in all three positions. The patterns of acoustic differences across the three syllable contexts also provide some support for a systematic role of prosodic boundaries in influencing the degree of coronal stop differentiation evident in the vowel formant transitions.
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    Linguistic identification in the determinationm of nationality: a preliminary report
    MCNAMARA, TIMOTHY FRANCIS ; EADES, DIANA ; FRASER, HELEN ; SIEGEL, JEFF ; BAKER, BRETT ( 2003)