Authors
Elizabeth Henly, Amy Sheldon
Publication date
1986/12
Journal
Language Learning
Volume
36
Issue
4
Pages
505-522
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
This study examines the role that duration plays in the perception of a new phonemic contrast, namely English /r/‐/I/, by Cantonese speakers. Previous research with Japanese speakers by Dissosway‐Huff, Port and Pisoni (1982) suggested that greater accuracy of perception of this new contrast correlates with greater duration of the acoustic signal. The results of our study show that increased duration of the acoustic signal is not sufficient to facilitate perception of English liquids by Cantonese speakers. Thus, our results provide no support for the Duration Hypothesis. We also show that differences in the perception of /r/ and /I/ by Japanese and Cantonese speakers can be explained in part by differences in their native language phonological constraints. Finally, we discuss possible causes for the perceptual difficulty that both types of speakers have with consonant clusters.
Total citations
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