Abstract

The present study investigates speakers’ ability to perceive and imitate prevoicing, testing speakers of languages differing its contrastive status: those where prevoicing serves as a primary cue to the laryngeal contrast (Indo-Aryan languages; “true voicing” languages, e.g., Tagalog), those where prevoicing never occurs (“aspirating” languages, e.g., Cantonese), and those where prevoicing occurs in free variation (other aspirating languages, e.g., English). After hearing pairs of Hindi words differing in presence/absence of prevoicing, participants were asked to imitate them, followed by an ABX discrimination task. Preliminary findings show above-chance discrimination accuracy as well as significant imitation of the difference in participants all language backgrounds, with place of articulation, consonantal, and vocalic cues all affecting the extent of prevoicing in production. As expected, speakers of languages where prevoicing is absent showed less overall prevoicing than other groups; however, there were not clear differences across language groups in discrimination ability. While faithful imitation was usually associated with accurate discrimination, good discrimination was also found on many tokens that were not faithfully imitated, indicating that other (production-based) factors are necessary to account for variability in imitative ability.

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