Production and perception of novel consonant clusters
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Kelley, Matthew C.
Oganyan, Marina
Wright, Richard A.
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Abstract
The present study details a visual world paradigm eye tracking experiment on perception and production of novel consonant clusters. The clusters varied in difficulty based on sonority or perceptual salience scales. During the familiarization phase, listeners heard and watched a story on-screen and produced the names of novel creatures and objects. Each story focused on one cluster. Four creatures/objects were introduced corresponding to the (1) target cluster (e.g., [dlɑpɹ]), (2) epenthesized cluster competitor (e.g., [dəlɑkn]), (3) first cluster consonant (e.g., donkey), and (4) second cluster consonant (e.g., lollipop). During each trial, participants verbally identified one of the four creatures/objects, and their gaze was tracked. We analyzed the productions and gazes to investigate the relative difficulty of producing and perceiving the consonant clusters. We predicted participants would (1) correctly produce/perceive a cluster, (2) epenthesize a vowel/perceive vowel epenethesis, or (3) perceive/produce only one of the cluster sounds. We statistically analyzed the participants’ propensity toward each behavior in both production and perception. As part of the analysis, we examined whether participant behavior was better predicted by analyzing the clusters with the sonority sequencing principle or in terms of acoustic salience and cue recoverability.
Description
Poster presentation at the 184th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, number 1pSC16.
Citation
Kelley, M. C., Oganyan, M., and Wright, R. A. Production and perception of novel consonant clusters. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 153 (3_supplement): A80. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0018233
