DocumentCode :
134195
Title :
The perception of Mandarin tones by learners from heritage and non-heritage backgrounds
Author :
Tsukada, Keiji ; Hui Ling Xu ; Rattanasone, Nan Xu
Author_Institution :
Macquarie Univ., Sydney, NSW, Australia
fYear :
2014
fDate :
12-14 Sept. 2014
Firstpage :
260
Lastpage :
264
Abstract :
Two groups of non-native adult learners of Mandarin in Australia were compared in their ability to perceive monosyllabic Mandarin words contrasting in lexical tones. They differed in their linguistic experience (non-heritage (n=7), heritage (n=8)). A group of seven native Mandarin speakers was included as controls. All non-native learners used English as their primary language of communication. However, the heritage learners were able to communicate in Cantonese as well as English. The question of interest was whether heritage learners´ knowledge of contrastive tone in Cantonese might give them an advantage over English-speaking learners in perceiving tone contrasts in Mandarin. In general, there were more similarities than differences between the two groups in their response patterns. Of the six tone contrasts examined (T1-T2, T1-T3, T1-T4, T2-T3, T2-T4, T3-T4), the two groups of learners clearly diverged on T1-T2 and T1-T4 contrasts in opposite directions. The heritage learners were more accurate on T1-T2 and less accurate on T1-T4 than the non-heritage learners who speak Australian English as their first language. Thus, we conclude that simply having an exposure to and functional knowledge of another tonal language since early childhood does not guarantee accurate perception of Mandarin tones compared to adult learners without prior experience with tonal languages.
Keywords :
computer aided instruction; linguistics; natural language processing; speaker recognition; Australian English; Cantonese language; English language; English-speaking learners; Mandarin tones perception; contrastive tone; functional knowledge; heritage learners knowledge; lexical tones; linguistic experience; monosyllabic Mandarin words; native Mandarin speakers; nonheritage backgrounds; nonnative adult learners; nonnative learners; primary language; response patterns; tonal language; tone contrasts; Accuracy; Australia; Educational institutions; Materials; Production; Speech; Cantonese; Mandarin; heritage; lexical tones; perception;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Chinese Spoken Language Processing (ISCSLP), 2014 9th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Singapore
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISCSLP.2014.6936587
Filename :
6936587
Link To Document :
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