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Unstressed Vowel Reduction Across Majorcan Catalan Dialects: Production and Spoken Word Recognition
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Final Accepted Manuscript
Affiliation
Univ ArizonaIssue Date
2018-09Keywords
Unstressed vowel reductionincomplete neutralization
acoustic phonetics
phonological processing
cross-modal priming
spoken-word recognition
Catalan dialects
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTDCitation
Llompart, M., & Simonet, M. (2018). Unstressed Vowel Reduction Across Majorcan Catalan Dialects: Production and Spoken Word Recognition. Language and Speech, 61(3), 430–465. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023830917736019Journal
LANGUAGE AND SPEECHRights
Copyright © 2018, © SAGE Publications.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
This study investigates the production and auditory lexical processing of words involved in a patterned phonological alternation in two dialects of Catalan spoken on the island of Majorca, Spain. One of these dialects, that of Palma, merges /?/ and /o/ as [o] in unstressed position, and it maintains /u/ as an independent category, [u]. In the dialect of Soller, a small village, speakers merge unstressed /?/, /o/, and /u/ to [u]. First, a production study asks whether the discrete, rule-based descriptions of the vowel alternations provided in the dialectological literature are able to account adequately for these processes: are mergers complete? Results show that mergers are complete with regards to the main acoustic cue to these vowel contrasts, that is, F1. However, minor differences are maintained for F2 and vowel duration. Second, a lexical decision task using cross-modal priming investigates the strength with which words produced in the phonetic form of the neighboring (versus one's own) dialect activate the listeners' lexical representations during spoken word recognition: are words within and across dialects accessed efficiently? The study finds that listeners from one of these dialects, Soller, process their own and the neighboring forms equally efficiently, while listeners from the other one, Palma, process their own forms more efficiently than those of the neighboring dialect. This study has implications for our understanding of the role of lifelong linguistic experience on speech performance.ISSN
0023-83091756-6053
PubMed ID
29058989Version
Final accepted manuscriptAdditional Links
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0023830917736019ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1177/0023830917736019