SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP

The current study tests the use of vowel duration as a cue for the voicing of the following stop by Saudi ESL learners. It is mainly constructed on the Language Transfer Theory (LTT) established by Gass and Selinker (1994), the Ontogeny Phylogeny Model (OPM) formulated by Major (2001), the Perceptua...

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Main Author: Alahmadi, Ahmed Abdullah
Format: Others
Published: OpenSIUC 2014
Subjects:
cue
Online Access:https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/1449
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2463&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-siu.edu-oai-opensiuc.lib.siu.edu-theses-24632018-12-20T04:37:30Z SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP Alahmadi, Ahmed Abdullah The current study tests the use of vowel duration as a cue for the voicing of the following stop by Saudi ESL learners. It is mainly constructed on the Language Transfer Theory (LTT) established by Gass and Selinker (1994), the Ontogeny Phylogeny Model (OPM) formulated by Major (2001), the Perceptual Assimilation Model (PAM) developed by Best (1994, 1995), and the Speech Learning Model (SLM) developed by Flege (1995). The instrument contained 30 English monosyllabic minimal pairs of the type CVC. The participants, who were living in the US, consisted of two groups: 5 advanced Saudi ESL learners with linguistic knowledge and 10 advanced Saudi ESL learners without linguistic knowledge. Results showed that both groups of participants (those with linguistics background and those without linguistics background) were fairly accurate at predicting final voiceless Coronal and Dorsal stops after a shorter vowel. On the other hand, they both had equal difficulties predicting voiced stops in this environment. This would explain why participants in both groups overall seemed to be listening for the voicing status of the final stop and disregarding differences in vowel length as a predictor of that voicing. Individual participants, overall, were quite uniform in their responses regardless of any background in linguistics. This finding suggests that participants in both groups relied much more on the actual voicing of the final stops than they did on the length of the preceding vowel. 2014-08-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/1449 https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2463&context=theses Theses OpenSIUC cue duration length stop voicing vowel
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic cue
duration
length
stop
voicing
vowel
spellingShingle cue
duration
length
stop
voicing
vowel
Alahmadi, Ahmed Abdullah
SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP
description The current study tests the use of vowel duration as a cue for the voicing of the following stop by Saudi ESL learners. It is mainly constructed on the Language Transfer Theory (LTT) established by Gass and Selinker (1994), the Ontogeny Phylogeny Model (OPM) formulated by Major (2001), the Perceptual Assimilation Model (PAM) developed by Best (1994, 1995), and the Speech Learning Model (SLM) developed by Flege (1995). The instrument contained 30 English monosyllabic minimal pairs of the type CVC. The participants, who were living in the US, consisted of two groups: 5 advanced Saudi ESL learners with linguistic knowledge and 10 advanced Saudi ESL learners without linguistic knowledge. Results showed that both groups of participants (those with linguistics background and those without linguistics background) were fairly accurate at predicting final voiceless Coronal and Dorsal stops after a shorter vowel. On the other hand, they both had equal difficulties predicting voiced stops in this environment. This would explain why participants in both groups overall seemed to be listening for the voicing status of the final stop and disregarding differences in vowel length as a predictor of that voicing. Individual participants, overall, were quite uniform in their responses regardless of any background in linguistics. This finding suggests that participants in both groups relied much more on the actual voicing of the final stops than they did on the length of the preceding vowel.
author Alahmadi, Ahmed Abdullah
author_facet Alahmadi, Ahmed Abdullah
author_sort Alahmadi, Ahmed Abdullah
title SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP
title_short SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP
title_full SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP
title_fullStr SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP
title_full_unstemmed SAUDI ESL LEARNERS' USE OF VOWEL DURATION AS A CUE FOR THE VOICING OF THE FOLLOWING STOP
title_sort saudi esl learners' use of vowel duration as a cue for the voicing of the following stop
publisher OpenSIUC
publishDate 2014
url https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/1449
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2463&context=theses
work_keys_str_mv AT alahmadiahmedabdullah saudiesllearnersuseofvoweldurationasacueforthevoicingofthefollowingstop
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