Abstract

Purpose: This study is to investigate whether Cantonese-speaking musicians may show stronger CP than Cantonese-speaking non-musicians in perceiving pitch directions generated based on Mandarin tones. It also aims to examine whether musicians may be more effective in processing stimuli and more sensitive to subtle differences caused by vowel quality.Methods: Cantonese-speaking musicians and non-musicians performed a categorical identification and a discrimination task on rising and falling continua of fundamental frequency generated based on Mandarin level, rising and falling tones on two vowels with nine duration values.Results: Cantonese-speaking musicians exhibited a stronger categorical perception (CP) of pitch contours than non-musicians based on the identification and discrimination tasks. Compared to non-musicians, musicians were also more sensitive to the change of stimulus duration and to the intrinsic F0 in pitch perception in pitch processing.Conclusion: The CP was strengthened due to musical experience and musicians benefited more from increased stimulus duration and were more efficient in pitch processing. Musicians might be able to better use the extra time to form an auditory representation with more acoustic details. Even with more efficiency in pitch processing, musicians' ability to detect subtle pitch changes caused by intrinsic F0 was not undermined, which is likely due to their superior ability to process temporal information. These results thus suggest musicians may have a great advantage in learning tones of a second language.

Highlights

  • Pitch, the perceptual correlate of fundamental frequency (F0), plays an important role in both music and language

  • In response to our first research goal, these results strongly suggested that musicians with a tonal language background tended to have stronger categorical perception (CP) of pitch in a nonnative language

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Summary

Introduction

The perceptual correlate of fundamental frequency (F0), plays an important role in both music and language. Cantonese listeners place more emphasis on average height of F0 contour than do Mandarin listeners when processing tones (Peng et al, 2012) This may explain why, besides Mandarin tone 2 (highrising) vs tone 3 (low-falling-rising), Cantonese speakers have additional difficulties differentiating Mandarin tone 1 (highlevel) form Mandarin tone 4 (high-falling) (Hao, 2012). Due to their denser tonal system, native Cantonese listeners may be more efficient in processing pitch variation than native Mandarin listeners (Lee et al, 1996; Zheng et al, 2012)

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