Strength of British English accents in altered listening conditions.

Perception & Psychophysics
Peter HowellDavid Vinson

Abstract

This work is concerned with the processing or representational level at which accent forms learned early in life can change and with whether alteration to a speaker's auditory environment can elicit an original accent. In Experiment 1, recordings were made of an equal number of (1) speakers living in the home counties (HC) of Britain (around the London conurbation) who claimed to have retained the accent of the region that they originally had come from, (2) speakers who stated that they had lost their regional accent and acquired an HC accent, and (3) native HC speakers. They read two texts in a normal listening environment. Listeners rated the similarity in accent between each of these texts and all the other texts. The results showed that in the normal listening conditions, the speakers who had lost their accent were rated as being more similar to HC English speakers than to those speakers from the same region who had retained their accent. In Experiment 2, recordings of the same speakers under frequency-shifted and delayed auditory feedback, as well as the normal listening conditions used earlier, were rated in order to see whether the manipulations of listening environment would elicit the speaker's original accent. Listene...Continue Reading

References

May 1, 1979·Brain and Language·G J Borden
May 1, 1992·The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America·J PerkellJ Webster
Feb 1, 1991·The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America·H Lane, J W Webster
Jun 21, 2001·Perception & Psychophysics·P Howell, K Dworzynski

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Citations

Aug 21, 2009·Journal of Neurophysiology·Jon T Sakata, Michael S Brainard
Jan 1, 2008·Language and Speech·Cynthia G Clopper, Ann R Bradlow
Jun 1, 2013·Neuropsychologia·Phillip D FletcherJason D Warren
Jun 6, 2012·Neuropsychologia·Julia C HailstoneJason D Warren

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