Title: The effect of dialectal variation on word recognition A case from Taiwan Southern Min
Authors: Lu, Yu-An
外國語文學系
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures
Keywords: word recognition;Taiwanese Southern Min;dialectal variation;repetition priming
Issue Date: 1-Jan-2019
Abstract: Previous studies on Chinese dialect variation have mostly focused on the description of dialects, the regions where these dialects are spoken, attitudes towards dialects, and acoustic differences across dialects. The present study draws on experimental evidence concerning a vowel difference in two Taiwan Southern Min (TSM) dialects to provide more understanding on how non-contrastive, dialectal variations may affect speakers' processing of speech. The variation of interest is a phonemic difference, [e] and [c], in the vowel inventory in two TSM dialects, in which the difference signals a lexical contrast in one dialect (e.g. [e-a] 'oyster' vs. [c-a] 'taro') but not in the other ([c-a] 'oyster, taro'). A long-term repetition-priming experiment investigating the word recognition involving the two vowels revealed a dialect effect on TSM speakers' word recognition in accordance with prior exposure, native-ness and variant frequency. Implications of the findings are provided.
URI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lali.00048.lu
http://hdl.handle.net/11536/153254
ISSN: 1606-822X
DOI: 10.1075/lali.00048.lu
Journal: LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS
Volume: 20
Issue: 4
Begin Page: 535
End Page: 568
Appears in Collections:Articles