Tue-1-4-7 Mandarin and English Adults’ Cue-weighting of Lexical Stress

Zhen zeng(MARCS Institute, Western Sydney University), Karen Mattock(School of Psychology), Liquan Liu(Western Sydney University and University of Oslo), Varghese Peter(School of Psychology, Western Sydney University), Alba Tuninetti(Bilkent University, Turkey) and Feng-Ming Tsao(National Taiwan University)
Abstract: Listeners segment speech based on the rhythm (e.g., stress- vs. syllable-timed, tone vs. non-tone) of their native language(s) [1,2]. In English, the perception of speech rhythm relies on analyzing auditory cues pertinent to lexical stress, including pitch, duration and intensity [3]. With interest in cross-linguistic impact on English lexical stress cue processing, the present study aims to explore English stress cue-weighting by Mandarin-speaking adults (with English adults as control), using an MMN multi-feature paradigm. Preliminary ERP data have revealed cross-linguistic perceptual differences to pitch and duration cues, but not to intensity cues in the bisyllabic non-word /dede/. Specifically, while English adults were similarly sensitive to pitch change at the initial and final syllable of the non-word, they were more sensitive to the duration change at the initial syllable. Comparatively, Mandarin adults were similarly sensitive to duration change at each position, but more sensitive to pitch at the final syllable. Lastly, both Mandarin group and the English group were more sensitive to the intensity sound change at the second syllable. Explanations for these findings were discussed.
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