The Effects of Language Experience and Speech Context on the Phonetic Accommodation of English-accented Spanish Voicing
Keyword(s):
Native speakers of Spanish with different amounts of experience with English classified stop-consonant voicing (/b/ versus /p/) across different speech accents: English-accented Spanish, native Spanish, and native English. While listeners with little experience with English classified target voicing with an English- or Spanish-like voice onset time (VOT) boundary, predicted by contextual VOT, listeners familiar with English relied on an English-like VOT boundary in an English-accented Spanish context even in the absence of clear contextual cues to English VOT. This indicates that Spanish listeners accommodated English-accented Spanish voicing differently depending on their degree of familiarization with the English norm.
2021 ◽
Vol 150
(1)
◽
pp. 460-477
Keyword(s):
1978 ◽
Vol 64
(S1)
◽
pp. S19-S20
1999 ◽
Vol 82
(5)
◽
pp. 2346-2357
◽
Keyword(s):
2011 ◽
Vol 15
(2)
◽
pp. 275-287
◽
Keyword(s):
Keyword(s):
2017 ◽
Vol 3
(1)
◽
pp. 41-66
◽
Keyword(s):
2015 ◽
Vol 25
(1)
◽
pp. 29-34
◽
Keyword(s):
2018 ◽
Vol 61
(3)
◽
pp. 789-796
◽