荷兰语中口音界限的个体差异

D. Hermes, F. Beaugendre, D. House
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引用次数: 2

摘要

有研究表明,在荷兰语中,当一个音节Sn的上升或下降音高的运动开始于元音开始前几十毫秒的间隔中,并在SO的元音偏移之前结束时,它可以明确地重音Sn。随着运动的开始逐渐转移到音节的后面位置,重音感知逐渐从音节Sn转移到下一个音节Sn+1’,这在重复的、重新合成的语音(如/.a.a.a.a)的实验中得到了证明。在A /和/mamamamama/中,上升和下降的音调运动开始的位置系统地变化,并要求受试者指出他们认为哪个音节是重音。在大多数情况下,“音节Sn重读”的响应数量随着音高运动开始的延迟而逐渐减少,但是,在某些情况下,特别是对于/.a.a.a.a的下降。a/元音之间静默时间较长的刺激,在响应分布中可以区分出一个平台期,在此期间“重读音节Sn”的响应比例不会继续下降,而是保持不变。在这些实验中,每个刺激只向每个受试者呈现两次,因此没有明确的个体受试者的反应分布,这就无法解释这个平台的性质。为了进一步了解这个高原的性质,我们确定并比较了个体受试者的反应分布。结果表明,单个被试的反应分布不呈现平稳状态。高原期是由于一些受试者有早期的重音边界,而另一些受试者有较晚的重音边界。讨论了这些发现的意义。
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Individual differences in accentuation boundaries in Dutch
It has been shown that in Dutch a rising or fal1ing pitch movement can unambiguously accent a syllable Sn when the onset of the movement is positioned in an interval starting some tens of milliseconds before the onset of the vowel and ending somewhat before the offset of the vowel of SO' As the start of the movement is gradually shifted to positions later in the syllable, the percept of accentuation gradual1y shifts from syllable Sn to the fol1owing syllable Sn+1' This was shown in experiments with reiterant, resynthesized speech utterances like /.a.a.a.a.a/ and /mamamamama/ in which the position of the onset of rising and falling pitch movements was systematical1y varied, and subjects were asked to indicate which syllable they perceived as accented. In most cases the number of responses "syllable Sn accented" gradually decreases sigmoidally as the onset of the pitch movement starts later, but, in some cases, especially for falls in /.a.a.a.a.a/ stimuli with relatively long silent periods between the vowels, a plateau can be distinguished in the response distribution during which the proportion of responses "syllable Sn accented" does not continue to decrease, but remains constant. In these experiments, every stimulus was presented only twice to each subject, so that no clear response distributions of individual subjects were available, which did not allow for an interpretation of the nature of this plateau. To find out more about the nature of this plateau, response distributions of individual subjects were determined and compared. It is shown that the response distributions of single subjects do not show a plateau. The plateau arises from the fact that some subjects have an early accentuation boundary, while others have a late accentuation boundary. The implications of these findings are discussed.
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