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Epenthetic vowels in Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual Japanese: a perceptual illusion? illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

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Page 1: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion?a perceptual illusion?

Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999)

By Carl O’Toole

Page 2: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Question:Question:

To what extent do phonotactics, language specific constraints on phonemes, play a role in speech perception?

Page 3: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

ProblemProblem

All of the studies have been conducted within a single language.

Page 4: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

BackgroundBackground

Japanese add epenthetic [u] or [o] after every syllable final C

Fight Faito Sphinx SufiNkusu

Page 5: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

PurposePurpose

Explore the role of phonotactics on perception by investigating the perceptual reality of epenthesis using offline phoneme detection tasks (experiments 1 and 2) and through 2 speeded ABX tasks (experiments 3 and 4).

Page 6: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Experiment 1: EpenthesisExperiment 1: Epenthesis

asked to listen to stimuli spoken by a Japanese speaker through headphones

participant were asked to indicate if they hear an [u] in the middle of the stimuli

Stimuli ‘ebzo’ and ‘ebuzo’.

Page 7: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

MethodMethod

Given 10 sequences of the type VC1uC2V, C1 is a voiced or voiceless

stop; C2 is a nasal or obstruent;V is any Japanese vowel that is not [u].

6 sets where the length of the vowel went from 0 ms to 18 to 36 to 54 to 72 to 89 ms (full vowel length )

Page 8: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Results Experiment 1Results Experiment 1

Page 9: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

ProblemProblem

The speaker that the participants listened to was Japanese. Although the segments had been edited to remove the [u], there could have been co-articulatory cues remaining that would have ‘told’ the Japanese participants to expect an [u].

Page 10: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

SolutionSolution Experiment 2 Experiment 2

Repeat experiment #1 almost exactly but exchange the Japanese speaker with a French one

2 extra conditions:– 1) make ‘ebzo’ with absolutely NO [u]

sound – 2) add a new vowel [i]to the CC cluster to

the ‘ebizo’ to measure baseline performance

Page 11: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Results Experiment 2Results Experiment 2

Page 12: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Figures 1 and 2Figures 1 and 2

Page 13: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

ProblemProblem

There are no controls for metalinguistic judgment. Participants had to know what a vowel is in order to do the experiments. Since the writing systems of Japanese and French are different, it is possible that the writing systems could affect vowel judgments in Japanese and French participants.

Page 14: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

SolutionSolution Experiment 3 Experiment 3

ABX identity judgment tasks. hear 3 stimuli in a row decide if the 3rd

stimulus matches the 1st or the 2nd. responses timed to reduce likelihood of

complicated response strategies.

Page 15: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Purpose:Purpose:

1) test perceptual basis of experiments 1 and 2.

2) test whether listeners impose their native phonology on unfamiliar linguistic stimuli regardless of whether the stimuli was foreign or native.

Page 16: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Method Method

speaker of the X sequence different from the A and B sequences.

crossover experiment introduced where contrastive vowel length also tested ‘ebuuzo’ vs. ‘ebuzo’

Stimuli were presented at a rate of 500 ms per sequence with 4 seconds for the participant to respond.

Page 17: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Method Method cont…cont…

next set started 1 second after the response or after 5 seconds depending on whether a judgment was made or not.

The lengths of the vowel difference were 95 ms in the ‘ebuuzo’- ‘ebuzo’ case and 89 ms in the ‘ebzo’ – ‘ebuzo’ case

Page 18: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Results Experiment 3Results Experiment 3

Page 19: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

ProblemProblem

Introducing a change in speaker to reduce low-level acoustic characteristics and increase reliance on abstract phonological representation was a deviation from the scientific norm.

Will the results hold if there is no speaker change and the participants can rely on purely acoustic information?

Page 20: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Solution Solution Experiment #4 Experiment #4

designed to be the same as #3 but with some additional changes.

the speaker would remain the same through out the sets and that X would be acoustically identical to either A or B.

Page 21: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Added PurposesAdded Purposes

Examine the epenthesis effect by:

– 1)examining the effect of practice,

– 2) checking the influence of experience with foreign languages by the participants.

Page 22: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Methods:Methods:

participant selection, materials and experimental procedures were the same as in experiment #3.

biographical questionnaire about foreign language experiences

participants evaluated subjectively by native French or English speakers

participants categorized in relation to their ability.

Page 23: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Results Experiment 4Results Experiment 4

Page 24: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Tables 1 and 2Tables 1 and 2

Page 25: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

ResultsResults

Japanese participants perceived an [u] between consonant clusters regardless of whether there was one there or not. They could however clearly tell the difference between 1 or 2 [u] vowels in a row.

French participants were quite capable of perceiving when an [u] was present between clusters and when it wasn’t but they had considerable trouble identifying 1 vs 2 [u] vowels in a row.

Page 26: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Results Results contcont……

Practice reduced response times and error rates but did not change the size of the effect nor did ability in CC languages seem to make much of a difference for the Japanese participants

Page 27: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

FindingsFindings

Overall these findings indicate that phonotactic knowledge exerts an extremely powerful force over speech perception. Not only do phonotactics influence classification of individual phonemes, the perception of illusory phonemes with no acoustic correlates can be induced. And it does it in non-degraded stimuli

Page 28: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

Findings Findings cont…cont…

Basically, people will not only assimilate nonnative sounds into native categories; people will invent or distort segments to make nonnative sounds fit the phonotactics of their language.

Page 29: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

What does this mean?What does this mean?

It tells us that the way that the continuous speech stream is divided into discrete phonemes isn’t universalisn’t universal; it depends on what the pattern of alternations between consonants and vowels is in the language in question.

Page 30: Epenthetic vowels in Japanese: a perceptual illusion? Emmanual Dupoux, et al (1999) By Carl O’Toole

The EndThe End