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Dankovicova, Jana; House, Jill; Crooks, Anna; Jones, Katie – Language and Speech, 2007
Few attempts have been made to look systematically at the relationship between musical and intonation analysis skills, a relationship that has been to date suggested only by informal observations. Following Mackenzie Beck (2003), who showed that musical ability was a useful predictor of general phonetic skills, we report on two studies…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Music Education, Music, Intonation
Vion, Monique; Colas, Annie – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
Linguistic studies of the intonation of Yes-No questions in French show that, in questions containing more than two stress groups, interrogative intonation is characterized by a sequence of lowered pitches or downstepped tones which precede the final rise. The gating paradigm was used here to determine whether subjects listening to French NP…
Descriptors: Cues, Intonation, French, Phonology
De Letter, Miet; Santens, Patrick; Estercam, Irina; Van Maele, Georges; De Bodt, Marc; Boon, Paul; Van Borsel, John – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2007
The prosodic aspects of hypokinetic dysarthria in Parkinson's disease (PD) have been the focus of numerous reports. Few data on the effects of levodopa on prosody, more specifically on the effects on the variability of prosodic characteristics such as pitch, loudness and speech rate, are available in advanced PD. The relation between these…
Descriptors: Patients, Diseases, Speech Language Pathology, Suprasegmentals
Peer reviewedFletcher, Janet; Stirling, Lesley; Mushin, Ilana; Wales, Roger – Language and Speech, 2002
Eight map task dialogs representative of general Australian English were coded for speaker turn and for dialog acts using a version of SWBD-DAMSL, a dialog act annotation scheme. High, low, simple, and complex rising tunes, and any corresponding dialog act codes were then compared. The Australian statement high rise (usually realized as a L…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Dialogs (Language), Foreign Countries, Intonation
Hu, Min – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Phonological awareness (PA) is the ability to analyze spoken language into its component sounds and to manipulate these smaller units. Literature review related to PA shows that a variety of factor groups play a role in PA in Mandarin such as linguistic experience (spoken language, alphabetic literacy, and second language learning), item type,…
Descriptors: Test Format, Speech, Syllables, Oral Language
Sekiguchi, Takahiro – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
Lexical prosody (e.g., stress and pitch accent) has been shown to constrain lexical activation of spoken words in various languages. In the present study, whether or not the constraint of lexical prosody is affected by word familiarity in lexical access of Japanese words was examined using a cross-modal priming task. The stimuli were pairs of…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Word Recognition, Japanese, Oral Language
Jones, Mari Riess; Johnston, Heather Moynihan; Puente, Jennifer – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
In three experiments, participants listened for a target's pitch change within recurrent nine-tone patterns having largely isochronous rhythms. Patterns differed in pitch structure of initial (context) and final (target distance) pattern segments. Also varied were: probe timing (Experiments 2 and 3) and instructions about probe timing (Experiments…
Descriptors: Intervals, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Intonation
Plante, Elena; Holland, Scott K.; Schmithorst, Vince J. – Brain and Language, 2006
Prosodic information in the speech signal carries information about linguistic structure as well as emotional content. Although children are known to use prosodic information from infancy onward to assist linguistic decoding, the brain correlates of this skill in childhood have not yet been the subject of study. Brain activation associated with…
Descriptors: Intonation, Children, Correlation, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Saffran, Jenny R.; Reeck, Karelyn; Niebuhr, Aimee; Wilson, Diana – Developmental Science, 2005
Sequences of notes contain several different types of pitch cues, including both absolute and relative pitch information. What factors determine which of these cues are used when learning about tone sequences? Previous research suggests that infants tend to preferentially process absolute pitch patterns in continuous tone sequences, while other…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Learning Processes, Intonation
Warrier, Catherine M.; Zatorre, Robert J. – Brain, 2004
Pitch constancy, perceiving the same pitch from tones with differing spectral shapes, requires one to extract the fundamental frequency from two sets of harmonics and compare them. We previously showed this difficult task to be easier when tonal context is present, presumably because the context creates a tonal reference point from which to judge…
Descriptors: Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cues, Intonation
Bent, Tessa; Bradlow, Ann R.; Wright, Beverly A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
In the present experiment, the authors tested Mandarin and English listeners on a range of auditory tasks to investigate whether long-term linguistic experience influences the cognitive processing of nonspeech sounds. As expected, Mandarin listeners identified Mandarin tones significantly more accurately than English listeners; however,…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Phonology, Mandarin Chinese, Cognitive Processes
Stevens, Catherine; Gallagher, Melinda – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This experiment investigated relational complexity and relational shift in judgments of auditory patterns. Pitch and duration values were used to construct two-note perceptually similar sequences (unary relations) and four-note relationally similar sequences (binary relations). It was hypothesized that 5-, 8- and 11-year-old children would perform…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Auditory Perception
Fine, Philip; Berry, Anna; Rosner, Burton – Psychology of Music, 2006
This study investigated the role of concurrent musical parts in pitching ability in sight-singing, concentrating on the effects of melodic and harmonic coherence. Twenty-two experienced singers sang their part twice in each of four novel chorales. The chorales contained either original or altered melody and original (tonal) or altered (atonal)…
Descriptors: Music Reading, Singing, Familiarity, Pattern Recognition
Leong, Che Kan; Cheng, Pui Wan; Tan, Li Hai – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2005
This study investigated the effect of phonological sensitivity of two comparable groups of grades 4 and 5 Chinese children, one a Putonghua-speaking group ("n" = 77) from Beijing and the other a Cantonese-speaking group ("n" = 80) from Hong Kong on English and Chinese pseudoword reading. It was hypothesized that the Beijing…
Descriptors: Language Role, Rhyme, Phonemes, Reading

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