Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English
Native speakers perceive illusory vowels when presented with sound sequences that do not respect the phonotactic constraints of their language (Dupoux, Kakehi, Hirose, Pallier, & Mehler, 1999; Kabak & Idsardi, 2007). There is, however, less work on the quality of the illusory vowel....
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doaj-d1933806c50d4bad8f3201ca3064c18b2021-10-02T01:34:11ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesLaboratory Phonology1868-63541868-63542018-04-019110.5334/labphon.5759Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and EnglishKarthik Durvasula0Ho-Hsin Huang1Sayako Uehara2Qian Luo3Yen-Hwei Lin4Michigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityNative speakers perceive illusory vowels when presented with sound sequences that do not respect the phonotactic constraints of their language (Dupoux, Kakehi, Hirose, Pallier, & Mehler, 1999; Kabak & Idsardi, 2007). There is, however, less work on the quality of the illusory vowel. Recently, it has been claimed that the quality of the illusory vowel is also modulated by the phonology of the language, and that the phenomenon of illusory vowels can be understood as a result of the listener reverse inferring the best parse of the underlying representation given their native language phonology and the acoustics of the input stream (Durvasula & Kahng, 2015). The view predicts that listeners are likely to hear different illusory vowels in different phonological contexts. In support of this prediction, we show through two perceptual experiments that Mandarin Chinese speakers (but not American English speakers) perceive different illusory vowels in different phonotactic contexts. Specifically, when presented with phonotactically illegal alveopalatal coda consonants, Mandarin speakers perceived an illusory /i/, but in illegal alveolar stop coda contexts, they perceived a /?/.https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/57Speech PerceptionIllusory VowelsMandarinAmerican English |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Karthik Durvasula Ho-Hsin Huang Sayako Uehara Qian Luo Yen-Hwei Lin |
spellingShingle |
Karthik Durvasula Ho-Hsin Huang Sayako Uehara Qian Luo Yen-Hwei Lin Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English Laboratory Phonology Speech Perception Illusory Vowels Mandarin American English |
author_facet |
Karthik Durvasula Ho-Hsin Huang Sayako Uehara Qian Luo Yen-Hwei Lin |
author_sort |
Karthik Durvasula |
title |
Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English |
title_short |
Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English |
title_full |
Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English |
title_fullStr |
Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English |
title_full_unstemmed |
Phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: Evidence from Mandarin and English |
title_sort |
phonology modulates the illusory vowels in perceptual illusions: evidence from mandarin and english |
publisher |
Open Library of Humanities |
series |
Laboratory Phonology |
issn |
1868-6354 1868-6354 |
publishDate |
2018-04-01 |
description |
Native speakers perceive illusory vowels when presented with sound sequences that do not respect the phonotactic constraints of their language (Dupoux, Kakehi, Hirose, Pallier, & Mehler, 1999; Kabak & Idsardi, 2007). There is, however, less work on the quality of the illusory vowel. Recently, it has been claimed that the quality of the illusory vowel is also modulated by the phonology of the language, and that the phenomenon of illusory vowels can be understood as a result of the listener reverse inferring the best parse of the underlying representation given their native language phonology and the acoustics of the input stream (Durvasula & Kahng, 2015). The view predicts that listeners are likely to hear different illusory vowels in different phonological contexts. In support of this prediction, we show through two perceptual experiments that Mandarin Chinese speakers (but not American English speakers) perceive different illusory vowels in different phonotactic contexts. Specifically, when presented with phonotactically illegal alveopalatal coda consonants, Mandarin speakers perceived an illusory /i/, but in illegal alveolar stop coda contexts, they perceived a /?/. |
topic |
Speech Perception Illusory Vowels Mandarin American English |
url |
https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/57 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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