Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages

This thesis investigates the perception of Japanese pitch accent by native speakers of pitch-accent languages and stress-accent languages. In particular, it seeks to determine whether or not pitch accent is a salient feature across language boundaries. An experiment was conducted to compare the corr...

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Main Author: Lanz, Linda A
Other Authors: Serafim, Leon A
Published: University of Hawaii at Manoa 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10125/7107
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spelling ndltd-UHAWAII-oai-scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu-10125-71072013-01-08T11:10:40ZJapanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languagesLanz, Linda AThis thesis investigates the perception of Japanese pitch accent by native speakers of pitch-accent languages and stress-accent languages. In particular, it seeks to determine whether or not pitch accent is a salient feature across language boundaries. An experiment was conducted to compare the correct perception of Japanese pitch accent by native speakers of three pitch-accent languages (Punjabi, Serbo-Croatian, and Swedish) and three stress-accent languages (English, Russian, and Samoan). For several reasons, this study employed the Kyoto dialect of Japanese, rather than the Tokyo dialect. The experiment - conducted either in person or via the Internet - was unable to refute the null hypothesis that neither pitch-accent speakers nor stress-accent speakers would be more successful at accurately perceiving Japanese pitch accent. However, a statistical analysis employing ANOVA revealed that there was a significant correlation between accent category of the Japanese test items and the subjects' performance, regardless of native language.x, 89 leavesUniversity of Hawaii at ManoaSerafim, Leon A2009-03-06T19:42:15Z2009-03-06T19:42:15Z2003-052003-05ThesisTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10125/7107All UHM dissertations and theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission from the copyright owner.https://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/2036
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sources NDLTD
description This thesis investigates the perception of Japanese pitch accent by native speakers of pitch-accent languages and stress-accent languages. In particular, it seeks to determine whether or not pitch accent is a salient feature across language boundaries. An experiment was conducted to compare the correct perception of Japanese pitch accent by native speakers of three pitch-accent languages (Punjabi, Serbo-Croatian, and Swedish) and three stress-accent languages (English, Russian, and Samoan). For several reasons, this study employed the Kyoto dialect of Japanese, rather than the Tokyo dialect. The experiment - conducted either in person or via the Internet - was unable to refute the null hypothesis that neither pitch-accent speakers nor stress-accent speakers would be more successful at accurately perceiving Japanese pitch accent. However, a statistical analysis employing ANOVA revealed that there was a significant correlation between accent category of the Japanese test items and the subjects' performance, regardless of native language. === x, 89 leaves
author2 Serafim, Leon A
author_facet Serafim, Leon A
Lanz, Linda A
author Lanz, Linda A
spellingShingle Lanz, Linda A
Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
author_sort Lanz, Linda A
title Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
title_short Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
title_full Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
title_fullStr Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
title_full_unstemmed Japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
title_sort japanese pitch-accent: cross-linguistic perceptions by speakers of stress- and pitch-accent languages
publisher University of Hawaii at Manoa
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10125/7107
work_keys_str_mv AT lanzlindaa japanesepitchaccentcrosslinguisticperceptionsbyspeakersofstressandpitchaccentlanguages
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