Introduction: This study investigates whether unfamiliar tone sandhi patterns in Tianjin Mandarin can be implicitly learned through an artificial language learning experiment, and if the acquired knowledge is rule-based and generalizable.
Methods: Participants were trained to learn monosyllabic words and disyllabic phrases with their attention focused on a word-order rule, while unknowingly being exposed to unfamiliar tone sandhi patterns. A judgement test with trial-to-trial confidence ratings was conducted to assess the learning outcomes and participants' awareness.
Results: Results revealed significantly above-chance performance on tone sandhi patterns for learned phrases. This learning effect was generalized to unseen phrases made up of familiar words, but not to phrases with new words, indicating a degree of abstraction across instances, though the learning is not fully rule-based. The confidence rating results suggest that participants were unaware of the structural sandhi knowledge, but the reaction time data of the judgement test indicate that the sandhi knowledge was learned with awareness at the level of noticing.
Discussion: The results have been discussed in light of theories of implicit learning and the findings of previous research on phonological learning.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1414732 | DOI Listing |
Front Psychol
January 2025
School of English and International Studies, Beijing Foreign Studies University, Beijing, China.
Introduction: This study investigates whether unfamiliar tone sandhi patterns in Tianjin Mandarin can be implicitly learned through an artificial language learning experiment, and if the acquired knowledge is rule-based and generalizable.
Methods: Participants were trained to learn monosyllabic words and disyllabic phrases with their attention focused on a word-order rule, while unknowingly being exposed to unfamiliar tone sandhi patterns. A judgement test with trial-to-trial confidence ratings was conducted to assess the learning outcomes and participants' awareness.
Lang Speech
March 2025
Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Indiana University Bloomington, USA.
Mandarin tone 3 sandhi refers to the phenomenon whereby a tone 3 syllable changes to a tone 2 when followed by another tone 3. This phonological process creates a deviation between the tonal forms realized at morphemic (/tone3-tone3/) and word ([tone2-tone3]) levels, posing questions in terms of how disyllabic tone 3 sandhi words are represented and accessed. The current study conducted three cross-modal lexical decision priming experiments to investigate this issue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhonetica
August 2024
Department of Applied English, 63372 National Chin-Yi University of Technology, Taichung, Taiwan (R.O.C.).
The tone values of a Tone 4 (T4) syllable are conventionally assumed to change from '51' to '53' when the syllable is followed by another T4 syllable in Mandarin Chinese. Literature focusing on T4 alternation is still inconclusive regarding the contexts for the alternations and whether the phenomenon should be better categorized as tone sandhi (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQ J Exp Psychol (Hove)
March 2024
Department of Language and Information Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
This study investigates the predictability effects of pitch accent on word recognition using the sandhi rule in Kansai Japanese (KJ). Native KJ speakers and native Tokyo Japanese (TJ) speakers (control group) saw images of four objects while hearing modifier + noun phrases and selected the corresponding image as quickly as possible. The word-initial tone of the noun's initial mora was predictable or unpredictable based on the tone of the preceding modifier's final mora in KJ but not in TJ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2022
Department of Chinese Language and Literature, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
Speakers with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are found to exhibit atypical pitch patterns in speech production. However, little is known about the production of lexical tones (T1, T2, T3, T4) as well as neutral tones (T1N, T2N, T3N, T4N) by tone-language speakers with ASD. Thus, this study investigated the height and shape of tones produced by Mandarin-speaking children with ASD and their age-matched typically developing (TD) peers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!