DURATION AND FORMANT VALUES OF UNSTRESSED VOWELS IN RUSSIAN AS ACOUSTIC CUES FOR SEGMENTATION: A PERCEPTIVE EXPERIMENT BASED ON NONCE WORDS

Cover Page

Cite item

Abstract

The research deals with natural perception of word boundaries by native speakers of Standard Russian. A specific feature of Russian word rhythmic structure is a so-called “prosodic core”: not only stressed, but also first pre-stressed vowels differ in duration and quality from vowels that occur in other positions, a phenomenon that is also commonly described as two degrees of reduction. The purpose of this study is to find out whether native Russian speakers are able to use acoustic differences between vowels [ɐ] (Degree 1 reduction) and [ə] (Degree 2 reduction) in order to recognize word boundaries correctly. The stimuli for the experiment were nonce words, five-syllable sequences including two stressed vowels; they were presented to the participants of the experiment in a form of fictional foreign names. The listeners were asked to choose between two possible ways of segmentation of these fivesyllable sequences into a first name and a second name of a person. The results of the experiment show that native Russian speakers used the acoustic differences between vowels for segmentation, but the results were statistically significant only for some of the stimuli. However, for half of stimuli the listeners performed correct segmentation at chance level. In addition, artificial modification of first pre-stressed vowel duration was performed for some of the stimuli; the participants’ responses show that vowel duration influences the degree of success in the segmentation task.

About the authors

Pavel Vasilievich Duryagin

National Research University Higher School of Economics

Author for correspondence.
Email: pduryagin@hse.ru

Candidate of Sciences in Philology, Lecturer at Faculty of Humanities, School of Linguistics, National Research University Higher School of Economics. Research interests: Russian dialectology, second language acquisition: Russian as L2, experimental phonetics

20, Myasnitskaya str., Moscow, 101000, Russian Federation

References

  1. Vysotskii, S.S. (1973). O zvukovoi strukture slova v russkikh govorakh. Issledovaniya po russkoi dialektologii. [On the sound structure of words in Russian dialects. Studies on Russian dialectology]. 17—41. Moscow: Nauka Publ. (In Russ).
  2. Kasatkina, R.F. (2005). Moskovskoe akan’e v svete nekotorykh dialektnykh dannykh. Voprosy yazykoznaniya. [Moscow Akan’e in the light of some dialectal data. Questions of Linguistics]. 2, 29—45. Moscow: Nauka Publ. (In Russ).
  3. Kachkovskaya, T.V. (2014). Ispol’zovanie temporal’nykh kharakteristik dlya segmentatsii rechevogo potoka na krupnye smyslovye edinitsy (na materiale russkogo yazyka. [The use of temporal characteristics for the segmentation of the speech stream into large semantic units (on the material of the Russian language)]. Tr. SPIIRAN Publ. 32, 68—81. Saint Petersburg. (In Russ).
  4. Knyazev, S.V. (2015). Reduktsiya glasnogo kak pokazatel’ ego udarnosti v sovremennom russkom literaturnom yazyke. [Reduction of the vowel as an indicator of its impact in modern Russian literary language]. Computer linguistics and intellectual technologies. Based on the materials of the annual International Conference “Dialogue”. (pp. 277—285). Moscow: Izd-vo RGGU Publ. (In Russ).
  5. Knyazev, S.V., & Pozharitskaya, S.K. (2005). Sovremennyi russkii literaturnyi yazyk: fonetika, grafika, orfografiya, orfoepiya. [Modern Russian literary language: phonetics, graphics, orthography, orthoepia]. Moscow: Akademicheskii proekt Publ. (In Russ).
  6. Kuznetsov, V.B., & Ott, A.V. (1989). Avtomaticheskii sintez rechi. Algoritmy preobrazovaniya «bukvazvuk» i upravlenie dlitel’nost’yu rechevykh segmentov. [Automatic speech synthesis. Algorithms for the conversion of “letter-sound” and control of the duration of speech segments]. Tallin: Valgus Publ. (In Russ).
  7. Moiseeva, E.V. (2015). Realizatsiya glasnykh posle myagkikh soglasnykh na stykakh slov v sovremennom russkom yazyke. [Realization of vowels after soft concordant words in modern Russian]. (Kandidat dissertation, Moscow). (In Russ).
  8. Panov, M.V. (1979). Sovremennyi russkii yazyk. Fonetika: uchebnik dlya un-tov. [The modern Russian language. Phonetics]. Moscow: Vyssh. shkola Publ. (In Russ).
  9. Riekhakainen, E.I. (2016). Vospriyatie russkoi ustnoi rechi: kontekst + chastotnost’. [Perception of Russian oral speech: context + frequency]. Saint-Petersburg: S.-Peterb. gos. un-t Publ. (In Russ).
  10. Trubetzkoy, N.S. (1969). Principles of phonology. [Fundamentals of phonology]. Berkeley: University of California Press. (In Eng).
  11. Altenberg, E.P. (2005). The perception of word boundaries in a second language. Second Language Research. 21 (4), 325—358. (In Eng).
  12. Barnes, J. (2006). Strength and weakness at the interface: positional neutralization in phonetics and phonology. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter. (In Eng).
  13. Boersma, P., Weenink, & D. Praat: doing phonetics by computer [Computer program]. Version 6.0.33, retrieved 26 September 2017 from http://www.praat.org/
  14. Cutler, A., Mehler, J., Norris, D. & Segui, J. (1986). The syllable’s differing role in the segmentation of French and English. Journal of Memory and Language. 25, 385—400. (In Eng).
  15. Cutler, A., & Butterfield, S. (1992). Rhythmic cues to speech segmentation: Evidence from juncture misperception. Journal of Memory and Language. 31, 218—236. (In Eng).
  16. Cutler, A., & Carter, D. (1987). The predominance of strong initial syllables in the English vocabulary. Computer Speech and Language. 2, 133—142. (In Eng).
  17. Cutler, A., & Norris, D. (1988). The role of strong syllables in segmentation for lexical access. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. 14, 113—121. (In Eng).
  18. Fougeron, C., & Keating, P.A. (1997). Articulatory strengthening at edges of prosodic domains. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 101 (6), 3728—3740. (In Eng).
  19. Hay, J.S.F., & Diehl, R.L. (2007). Perception of rhythmic grouping: Testing the iambic/trochaic law. Perception and Psychophysics. 69 (1), 113—122. (In Eng).
  20. Ito, K., & Strange, W. (2009). Perception of allophonic cues to English word boundaries by Japanese second language learners of English. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 125 (4), 2348— 2360. (In Eng).
  21. Kabak, B., Maniwa, K. & Kazanina N. (2010). Listeners Use Vowel Harmony and Word-Final Stress to Spot Nonsense Words: A Study of Turkish and French. Laboratory Phonology. 11, 207—224. (In Eng).
  22. Padgett, J., & Tabain, M. (2005). Adaptive dispersion theory and phonological vowel reduction in Russian. Phonetica. 62 (1), 14—54. (In Eng).
  23. Sanders, L.D., Neville, H.J. & Woldorff, M.G. (2002). Speech segmentation by native and non-native speakers: The use of lexical, syntactic, and stress-pattern cues. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. 45 (3), 519—530. (In Eng).
  24. Weber, A., & Broersma, M. (2012). Spoken Word Recognition in Second Language Acquisition. In C.A. Chapelle (Ed.). The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics. Bognor Regis: Wiley-Blackwell. (In Eng).

Copyright (c) 2018 Duryagin P.V.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies