Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese

This study investigated the extent to which the Japanese lexical pitch-accent distinction is neutralized in word-final position. Native speakers of Tokyo Japanese produced minimal word pairs differing in final accent status. Words were produced both in isolation and in a sentential context, where ne...

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Main Author: Maniwa, Kazumi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas, Department of Linguistics 2002-01-01
Series:Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1808/590
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spelling doaj-8e7d98dd8f3d47fb9eb99d8342eed19c2020-11-24T21:21:36ZengUniversity of Kansas, Department of LinguisticsKansas Working Papers in Linguistics2378-76002002-01-012613210.17161/KWPL.1808.590Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese Maniwa, KazumiThis study investigated the extent to which the Japanese lexical pitch-accent distinction is neutralized in word-final position. Native speakers of Tokyo Japanese produced minimal word pairs differing in final accent status. Words were produced both in isolation and in a sentential context, where neutralization would not be expected due to following tonal specification. Examination of pitch patterns on relevant moras revealed a clear distinction between accent-opposed pairs produced in context but no such difference between items produced in isolation. Both the words produced in isolation and the words excised from sentential contexts were then presented to Japanese listeners in a lexical identification task. Participants could clearly distinguish items extracted from sentences but identified words uttered in isolation at chance level. These results suggest that phonological neutralization of final pitch accent is complete, showing no effects of underlying specification in either production or perception. http://hdl.handle.net/1808/590Japanese language-- Tone
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maniwa, Kazumi
spellingShingle Maniwa, Kazumi
Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese
Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
Japanese language-- Tone
author_facet Maniwa, Kazumi
author_sort Maniwa, Kazumi
title Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese
title_short Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese
title_full Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese
title_fullStr Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence of Complete Neutralization of Word-Final Tonal Specification in Japanese
title_sort acoustic and perceptual evidence of complete neutralization of word-final tonal specification in japanese
publisher University of Kansas, Department of Linguistics
series Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
issn 2378-7600
publishDate 2002-01-01
description This study investigated the extent to which the Japanese lexical pitch-accent distinction is neutralized in word-final position. Native speakers of Tokyo Japanese produced minimal word pairs differing in final accent status. Words were produced both in isolation and in a sentential context, where neutralization would not be expected due to following tonal specification. Examination of pitch patterns on relevant moras revealed a clear distinction between accent-opposed pairs produced in context but no such difference between items produced in isolation. Both the words produced in isolation and the words excised from sentential contexts were then presented to Japanese listeners in a lexical identification task. Participants could clearly distinguish items extracted from sentences but identified words uttered in isolation at chance level. These results suggest that phonological neutralization of final pitch accent is complete, showing no effects of underlying specification in either production or perception.
topic Japanese language-- Tone
url http://hdl.handle.net/1808/590
work_keys_str_mv AT maniwakazumi acousticandperceptualevidenceofcompleteneutralizationofwordfinaltonalspecificationinjapanese
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