Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity

Most investigations of the representation and processing of speech sounds focus on their segmental representations, and considerably less is known about the representation of suprasegmental phenomena (e.g., Mandarin tones). Here we examine the mismatch negativity (MMN) response to the contrast betwe...

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Үндсэн зохиолчид: Politzer-Ahles, S, Schulter, K, Wu, K, Almeida, D
Формат: Journal article
Хэвлэсэн: American Psychological Association 2016
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author Politzer-Ahles, S
Schulter, K
Wu, K
Almeida, D
author_facet Politzer-Ahles, S
Schulter, K
Wu, K
Almeida, D
author_sort Politzer-Ahles, S
collection OXFORD
description Most investigations of the representation and processing of speech sounds focus on their segmental representations, and considerably less is known about the representation of suprasegmental phenomena (e.g., Mandarin tones). Here we examine the mismatch negativity (MMN) response to the contrast between Mandarin Tone 3 (T3) and other tones using a passive oddball paradigm. Since the MMN response has been shown to be sensitive to the featural contents of speech sounds in a way that is compatible with underspecification theories of phonological representations, here we test the predictions of such theories regarding suprasegmental phenomena. Assuming T3 to be underspecified in Mandarin (because it has variable surface representations and low pitch), we predicted that an asymmetric MMN response would be elicited when T3 is contrasted with another tone. In two of our three experiments, this was observed, but in non-Mandarin-speaking participants as well as native speakers, suggesting that the locus of the effect was perceptual (acoustic or phonetic) rather than phonological. In a third experiment, the predicted asymmetry was limited to native speakers. These results highlight the importance of distinguishing phonological and perceptual contributions to MMN asymmetries, but also demonstrate a role of abstract phonological representations in which certain information is underspecified in long-term memory.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ec3164e3-5a11-4a4c-a95d-d4ffa2743ea92022-03-27T11:15:38ZAsymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativityJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ec3164e3-5a11-4a4c-a95d-d4ffa2743ea9Symplectic Elements at OxfordAmerican Psychological Association2016Politzer-Ahles, SSchulter, KWu, KAlmeida, DMost investigations of the representation and processing of speech sounds focus on their segmental representations, and considerably less is known about the representation of suprasegmental phenomena (e.g., Mandarin tones). Here we examine the mismatch negativity (MMN) response to the contrast between Mandarin Tone 3 (T3) and other tones using a passive oddball paradigm. Since the MMN response has been shown to be sensitive to the featural contents of speech sounds in a way that is compatible with underspecification theories of phonological representations, here we test the predictions of such theories regarding suprasegmental phenomena. Assuming T3 to be underspecified in Mandarin (because it has variable surface representations and low pitch), we predicted that an asymmetric MMN response would be elicited when T3 is contrasted with another tone. In two of our three experiments, this was observed, but in non-Mandarin-speaking participants as well as native speakers, suggesting that the locus of the effect was perceptual (acoustic or phonetic) rather than phonological. In a third experiment, the predicted asymmetry was limited to native speakers. These results highlight the importance of distinguishing phonological and perceptual contributions to MMN asymmetries, but also demonstrate a role of abstract phonological representations in which certain information is underspecified in long-term memory.
spellingShingle Politzer-Ahles, S
Schulter, K
Wu, K
Almeida, D
Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity
title Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity
title_full Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity
title_fullStr Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity
title_full_unstemmed Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity
title_short Asymmetries in the perception of Mandarin tones: evidence from mismatch negativity
title_sort asymmetries in the perception of mandarin tones evidence from mismatch negativity
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