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Formant dynamics in second language speech: Japanese speakers’ production of English liquids

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Formant dynamics in second language speech: Japanese speakers’ production of English liquids. / Nagamine, Takayuki.
In: The Journal of Acoustical Society of America, Vol. 155, No. 1, 22.01.2024, p. 479-495.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Nagamine T. Formant dynamics in second language speech: Japanese speakers’ production of English liquids. The Journal of Acoustical Society of America. 2024 Jan 22;155(1):479-495. doi: 10.1121/10.0024351

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Nagamine, Takayuki. / Formant dynamics in second language speech : Japanese speakers’ production of English liquids. In: The Journal of Acoustical Society of America. 2024 ; Vol. 155, No. 1. pp. 479-495.

Bibtex

@article{455ee8f24dd4446599cd7e70771b3049,
title = "Formant dynamics in second language speech: Japanese speakers{\textquoteright} production of English liquids",
abstract = "This article reports an acoustic study analysing the time-varying spectral properties of word-initial English liquids produced by 31 first-language (L1) Japanese and 14 L1 English speakers. While it is widely accepted that L1 Japanese speakers have difficulty in producing English /l/ and /ɹ/, the temporal characteristics of L2 English liquids are not well-understood, even in light of previous findings that English liquids show dynamic properties. In this study, the distance between the first and second formants (F2–F1) and the third formant (F3) are analysed dynamically over liquid-vowel intervals in three vowel contexts using generalised additive mixed models (GAMMs). The results demonstrate that L1 Japanese speakers produce word-initial English liquids with stronger vocalic coarticulation than L1 English speakers. L1 Japanese speakers may have difficulty in dissociating F2–F1 between the liquid and the vowel to a varying degree, depending on the vowel context, which could be related to perceptual factors. This article shows that dynamic information uncovers specific challenges that L1 Japanese speakers have in producing L2 English liquids accurately.",
author = "Takayuki Nagamine",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1121/10.0024351",
language = "English",
volume = "155",
pages = "479--495",
journal = "The Journal of Acoustical Society of America",
publisher = "AIP Publishing",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Formant dynamics in second language speech

T2 - Japanese speakers’ production of English liquids

AU - Nagamine, Takayuki

PY - 2024/1/22

Y1 - 2024/1/22

N2 - This article reports an acoustic study analysing the time-varying spectral properties of word-initial English liquids produced by 31 first-language (L1) Japanese and 14 L1 English speakers. While it is widely accepted that L1 Japanese speakers have difficulty in producing English /l/ and /ɹ/, the temporal characteristics of L2 English liquids are not well-understood, even in light of previous findings that English liquids show dynamic properties. In this study, the distance between the first and second formants (F2–F1) and the third formant (F3) are analysed dynamically over liquid-vowel intervals in three vowel contexts using generalised additive mixed models (GAMMs). The results demonstrate that L1 Japanese speakers produce word-initial English liquids with stronger vocalic coarticulation than L1 English speakers. L1 Japanese speakers may have difficulty in dissociating F2–F1 between the liquid and the vowel to a varying degree, depending on the vowel context, which could be related to perceptual factors. This article shows that dynamic information uncovers specific challenges that L1 Japanese speakers have in producing L2 English liquids accurately.

AB - This article reports an acoustic study analysing the time-varying spectral properties of word-initial English liquids produced by 31 first-language (L1) Japanese and 14 L1 English speakers. While it is widely accepted that L1 Japanese speakers have difficulty in producing English /l/ and /ɹ/, the temporal characteristics of L2 English liquids are not well-understood, even in light of previous findings that English liquids show dynamic properties. In this study, the distance between the first and second formants (F2–F1) and the third formant (F3) are analysed dynamically over liquid-vowel intervals in three vowel contexts using generalised additive mixed models (GAMMs). The results demonstrate that L1 Japanese speakers produce word-initial English liquids with stronger vocalic coarticulation than L1 English speakers. L1 Japanese speakers may have difficulty in dissociating F2–F1 between the liquid and the vowel to a varying degree, depending on the vowel context, which could be related to perceptual factors. This article shows that dynamic information uncovers specific challenges that L1 Japanese speakers have in producing L2 English liquids accurately.

U2 - 10.1121/10.0024351

DO - 10.1121/10.0024351

M3 - Journal article

VL - 155

SP - 479

EP - 495

JO - The Journal of Acoustical Society of America

JF - The Journal of Acoustical Society of America

IS - 1

ER -