2011
DOI: 10.1121/1.3651818
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Perception of intonation in Mandarin Chinese

Abstract: There is a tendency across languages to use a rising pitch contour to convey question intonation and a falling pitch contour to convey a statement. In a lexical tone language such as Mandarin Chinese, rising and falling pitch contours are also used to differentiate lexical meaning. How, then, does the multiplexing of the F(0) channel affect the perception of question and statement intonation in a lexical tone language? This study investigated the effects of lexical tones and focus on the perception of intonati… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…For statement intonation identification, statements ending with Tone4 showed a significantly higher identification rate (99.3%) than statements ending with Tone2 (91.3%). These results are in line with previous studies (Xu and Mok, 2012;Yuan, 2011). However, our results concerning question intonation identification were different from what was reported in Yuan (2011).…”
contrasting
confidence: 40%
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“…For statement intonation identification, statements ending with Tone4 showed a significantly higher identification rate (99.3%) than statements ending with Tone2 (91.3%). These results are in line with previous studies (Xu and Mok, 2012;Yuan, 2011). However, our results concerning question intonation identification were different from what was reported in Yuan (2011).…”
contrasting
confidence: 40%
“…Results showed an MMN for the tone deviant but not for the intonation deviant. As the MMN is linked to higher order perceptual processes underlying stimulus discrimination (Pulvermüller and Shtyrov, 2006), the above two studies suggest that at the pre-attentive stage, native listeners can tease apart question intonation from statement intonation when the intonation is combined with Tone4, but they are not able to tease apart the two types of intonation when the intonation is combined with Tone2, just as what Yuan (2011) has reported with behavioral perceptual judgment data. This correspondence of the online MMN results with the offline behavioral results validates the initial ERP evidence of the interaction of tone and intonation in Mandarin.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 69%
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