2018
DOI: 10.3390/languages3030037
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Non-Native Dialect Matters: The Perception of European and Brazilian Portuguese Vowels by Californian English Monolinguals and Spanish–English Bilinguals

Abstract: Studies show that second language (L2) learners’ perceptual patterns differ depending on their native dialect (e.g., Chládková and Podlipský 2011; Escudero and Williams 2012). Likewise, speakers from the same native language background show different perceptual patterns depending on the dialect to which they are exposed (e.g., Escudero and Boersma 2004; Escudero and Chládková 2010). The Second Language Linguistic Perception model (L2LP; Escudero 2005) accounts for these differences, explicitly stating that the… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The results suggest that overall, there is a bidialectal advantage for Shanghai Chinese speakers in producing the easy English vowels, but that advantage becomes less apparent for the difficult English vowels, particularly in terms of formant frequencies. The results are in line with the proposal that the bilingual advantage is not broad-based; rather, it is modulated by the degree of difficulty and learnability of the target sounds (Antoniou et al, 2015; Elvin et al, 2018; Escudero et al, 2016; Kopečková, 2016). When the target non-native sounds are “easy,” bilingualism could play a positive role in enhancing learning, whereas for learning “difficult” non-native target sounds, bilingualism may not be sufficient to yield high accuracy.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…The results suggest that overall, there is a bidialectal advantage for Shanghai Chinese speakers in producing the easy English vowels, but that advantage becomes less apparent for the difficult English vowels, particularly in terms of formant frequencies. The results are in line with the proposal that the bilingual advantage is not broad-based; rather, it is modulated by the degree of difficulty and learnability of the target sounds (Antoniou et al, 2015; Elvin et al, 2018; Escudero et al, 2016; Kopečková, 2016). When the target non-native sounds are “easy,” bilingualism could play a positive role in enhancing learning, whereas for learning “difficult” non-native target sounds, bilingualism may not be sufficient to yield high accuracy.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…The mixed results of previous studies as reviewed above suggest that the answer should take into account the cross-linguistic influences between native and non-native sounds. Specifically, the acoustic characteristics and learning difficulty of the non-native speech sounds in relation to the native sound system could play a significant role in determining how bilingualism/bidialectalism influences non-native speech learning (Antoniou et al, 2015;Elvin et al, 2018;Escudero et al 2013Escudero et al , 2016Kopečková, 2016). For adult learners, the acquisition of sounds in a new language is usually influenced by the learner's experience with speech sounds in previously acquired languages.…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Studies on vowel discrimination by non-native speakers with no knowledge of Portuguese were carried out by Elvin et al (2014Elvin et al ( , 2018. Their findings show that the most difficult vowel contrast was /o/-/u/, followed by the pair /e/-/i/.…”
Section: Perception and Production Studies On Open-close Mid Vowel Co...mentioning
confidence: 99%