• 제목/요약/키워드: L2 Vowel Acquisition

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Effects of age of L2 acquisition and L2 experience on the production of English vowels by Korean speakers

  • Eunhae Oh;Eunyoung Shin
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제15권3호
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    • pp.9-16
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    • 2023
  • The current study investigated the influence of age of L2 acquisition (AOA) and length of residence (LOR) in the L2 setting country on the production of voicing-conditioned vowel duration and spectral qualities in English by Korean learners. The primary aim was to explore the ways in which the language-specific phonetic features are acquired by the age of onset and L2 experience. Analyses of the archived corpus data produced by 45 native speakers of Korean showed that, regardless of AOA or LOR, absolute vowel duration was used as a salient correlate of voicing contrast in English for Korean learners. The accuracy of relative vowel duration was influenced more by onset age than by L2 experience, suggesting that being exposed to English at an early age may benefit the acquisition of temporal dimension. On the other hand, the spectral characteristics of English vowels were more consistently influenced by L2 experience, indicating that immersive experience in the L2 speaking environment are likely to improve the accurate production of vowel quality. The distinct influence of the onset age and L2 experience on the specific phonetic cues in L2 vowel production provides insight into the intricate relationship between the two factors on the manifestation of L2 phonological knowledge.

Vowel epenthesis and stress-focus interaction in L2 speech perception

  • Goun Lee;Dong-Jin Shin
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제16권2호
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    • pp.11-17
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    • 2024
  • The goal of the current study is to investigate whether L2 learners' perceptual ability regarding epenthetic vowels is interconnected with other aspects of speech recognition, such as lexical stress, sentence focus, and vowel recognition. Twenty-five Korean L2 learners of English participated in perception experiments assessing vowel epenthesis oddity, lexical stress oddity, sentence focus oddity, and vowel identification. Results indicate that accuracy on the vowel epenthesis oddity test is influenced by both lexical stress and sentence focus, suggesting that perceptual ability regarding epenthetic vowels is influenced by the acquisition of L2 rhythmic structure at both word and sentence levels. Additionally, this study identifies a proficiency effect on vowel epenthesis recognition, implying that the influence of L1 phonotactics diminishes as L2 proficiency increases. Taken together, this study illustrates the interaction between perceptual abilities in vowel epenthesis and prosodic stress in the field of L2 speech perception.

중국인 학습자가 발음한 한국어 단모음에 대한 종단 연구 (A Longitudinal Study of Korean Vowel Production by Chinese Learners of Korean)

  • 김주연
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제5권2호
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    • pp.71-79
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    • 2013
  • This study provided longitudinal examination of the Chinese learners' acquisition of the Korean vowels. Specifically the author examined whether Korean monophthongs are acquired rapidly in early stages of learning (Flege, Munro and Skelton, 1992; Munro and Derwing, 2008) or they develop rather gradually in proportion to the learners' experience (Byee, 2001; Ellis, 2006). This study collected the Korean vowel production by 23 Chinese learners for a year, and then analysed F1 and F2 of each Korean vowel. The results showed that 1) Most of the second language (L2) vowels were rapidly improved during the first six or nine months of Korean learning before reaching the constant stage; and 2) The exact acquisition trajectories varied across the seven vowels. Specifically the vowels which were acquired in the early stage of learning were /i, e, ɨ/ for F1 and /ʌ, e, o, u/ for F2. Thus this study supports the hypothesis of Flege et al. (1992) and Munro and Derwing (2008) except the fact that each vowel showed the different learning route.

한국인 학습자의 영어 모음 인지: 새로운 L2 모음 범주와 비슷한 L2 모음 범주의 비교 (Perception of English Vowels By Korean Learners: Comparisons between New and Similar L2 Vowel Categories)

  • 이계윤;초미희
    • 한국콘텐츠학회논문지
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    • 제15권8호
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    • pp.579-587
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    • 2015
  • 본 연구의 목적은 한국인 학습자들이 어떻게 영어모음을 인지하는지를 알아보고, 언어학습모델(SLM)의 예측처럼 한국어에 없는 새로운 영어모음이 한국어와 비슷한 영어모음보다 습득에 용이한지 살펴보는 것이다. 20명의 한국인 실험참여자들은 6개의 영어모음 /i, ɪ, u, ʊ, ɛ, æ/을 사료로 한 영어-한국어 대응 테스트와 영어 모음 판별 테스트에 참여하였다. 영어-한국어 대응 테스트의 결과 대부분의 학생들이 음향적으로 구분되어있는 영어모음 /i/-/ɪ/, /u/-/ʊ/를 각각 하나의 한국어모음인 /이/와 /우/로 대응하여 인지하는 것을 보여주었다. 또한 영어모음 /ɛ/를 한국어모음 /에/와 /애/로 대응하여 인지하였고, 영어모음 /æ/도 마찬가지로 한국어모음 /에/와 /애/로 혼용하여 대응하는 패턴을 보여줌으로써 한국인 영어학습자들이 영어 모음쌍 /i-ɪ/, /u-ʊ/, /ɛ-æ/을 인지하기 어려울 것으로 예측되었다. 영어모음 판별테스트에서는 새로운 음소로 분류된 영어모음 /ɪ, ʊ, æ/의 판별 정확도(ɪ: 81.3%, ʊ: 62.5%, æ: 60.0%)가 비슷한 음소로 분류된 영어모음 /i, u, ɛ/의 판별 정확도(i: 28,8%, u: 28.8%, ɛ: 32.4%)보다 유의하게 높아서 SLM의 예측대로 새로운 음소가 습득하기 쉽다는 것을 확인할 수 있었다. 또한 비슷한 음소로 분류된 영어모음들의 판별 정확도가 새로운 음소에서의 판별 정확도보다도 현저히 낮은 수치를 보여준 것을 과일반화로 설명하였는데, L2 학습자가 새로운 모음 범주를 습득하는 과정에서 비슷한 L2 소리를 새로운 L2 소리로 과도하게 대치한 현상이다. 본 연구결과를 바탕으로 교육적인 함의점도 제시되었다.

Lexical Encoding of L2 Suprasegmentals: Evidence from Korean Learners' Acquisition of Japanese Vowel Length Distinctions

  • Han, Jeong-Im
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제1권4호
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    • pp.17-27
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    • 2009
  • Despite many studies on the production and perception of L2 phonemes, studies on how such phonemes are encoded lexically remain scarce. The aim of this study is to examine whether L2 learners have a perceptual problem with L2 suprasegmentals which are not present in their L1, or if they are able to perceive but not able to encode them in their lexicon. Specifically, Korean learners were tested to see if they could discriminate the vowel length differences in Japanese at the psychoacoustic level through a simple AX discrimination task. Then, a speeded lexical decision task with high phonetic variability was conducted to see whether they could use such contrasts lexically. The results showed that Korean learners of Japanese have no difficulties in discriminating Japanese vowel length contrast, but they are unable to encode such contrast in their phonological representation, even with long L2 exposure.

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Differences in Vowel Duration Due to the Underlying Voicing of the Following Coda Stop in Russian and English: Native and Non-native Values

  • Oh, Eun-Jin
    • 음성과학
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    • 제13권3호
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    • pp.19-33
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    • 2006
  • This study explores whether Russian, known to have a process of syllable-final devoicing, reveals differences in vowel duration as a function of the underlying voicing of the coda stop. This paper also examines whether non-native speakers of Russian and English learn typical L2 values in vowel duration. The results indicate that vowels in Russian have a slightly longer mean duration before a voiced stop than before a voiceless stop (a mean difference of 9.52 ms), but in most cases the differences did not exhibit statistical significance. In English the mean difference was 60.05 ms, and the differences were in most cases statistically significant. All native Russian speakers of English produced larger absolute differences in vowel duration for English than for Russian, and all native English speakers of Russian produced smaller absolute differences for Russian than for English. More experienced learners seemed to achieve more native-like values of vowel duration than less experienced learners did, suggesting that learning occurs gradually as the learners gain more experience with the L2.

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영어권, 중국어권 학습자의 한국어 모음 지각 -모국어와 목표 언어 간의 음향 자질의 유사성과 한국어 경험의 효과 중심으로- (Perception of Korean Vowels by English and Mandarin Learners of Korean: Effects of Acoustic Similarity Between L1 and L2 Sounds and L2 Experience)

  • 류나영
    • 한국어교육
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    • 제29권1호
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    • pp.1-23
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    • 2018
  • This paper investigates how adult Mandarin- and English- speaking learners of Korean perceive Korean vowels, with focus on the effect of the first language (L1) and the second language (L2) acoustic relationship, as well as the influence of Korean language experience. For this study, native Mandarin and Canadian English speakers who have learned Korean as a foreign language, as well as a control group of native Korean speakers, participated in two experiments. Experiment 1 was designed to examine acoustic similarities between Korean and English vowels, as well as Korean and Mandarin vowels to predict which Korean vowels are relatively easy, or difficult for L2 learners to perceive. The linear discriminant analysis (Klecka, 1980) based on their L1-L2 acoustic similarity predicted that L2 Mandarin learners would have perceptual difficulty rankings for Korean vowels as follows: (the easiest) /i, a, e/ >> /ɨ, ʌ, o, u/ (most difficult), whereas L2 English learners would have perceptual difficulty rankings for Korean vowels as follows: (the easiest) /i, a, e, ɨ, ʌ/ >> /o, u/ (most difficult). The goal of Experiment 2 was to test how accurately L2 Mandarin and English learners perceive Korean vowels /ɨ, ʌ, o, u/ which are considered to be difficult for L2 learners. The results of a mixed-effects logistic model revealed that English listeners showed higher identification accuracy for Korean vowels than Mandarin listeners, indicating that having a larger L1 vowel inventory than the L2 facilitates L2 vowel perception. However, both groups have the same ranking of Korean vowel perceptual difficulty: ɨ > ʌ > u > o. This finding indicates that adult learners of Korean can perceive the new vowel /ɨ/, which does not exist in their L1, more accurately than the vowel /o/, which is acoustically similar to vowels in their L1, suggesting that L2 learners are more likely to establish additional phonetic categories for new vowels. In terms of the influence of experience with L2, it was found that identification accuracy increases as Korean language experience rises. In other words, the more experienced English and Mandarin learners of Korean are, the more likely they are to have better identification accuracy in Korean vowels than less experienced learners of Korean. Moreover, there is no interaction between L1 background and L2 experience, showing that identification accuracy of Korean vowels is higher as Korean language experience increases regardless of their L1 background. Overall, these findings of the two experiments demonstrated that acoustic similarity between L1 and L2 sounds using the LDA model can partially predict perceptual difficulty in L2 acquisition, indicating that other factors such as perceptual similarity between L1 and L2, the merge of Korean /o/ and /u/ may also influence their Korean vowel perception.

소음이 외국어 학습에 미치는 영향 (Noise Effects on Foreign Language Learning)

  • 임은수;김현기;김병삼;김종교
    • 음성과학
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    • 제6권
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    • pp.197-217
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    • 1999
  • In a noisy class, the acoustic-phonetic features of the teacher and the perceptual features of learners are changed comparison with a quiet environment. Acoustical analyses were carried out on a set of French monosyllables consisting of 17 consonants and three vowel /a, e, i/, produced by 1 male speaker talking in quiet and in 50, 60 and 70 dB SPL of masking noise on headphone. The results of the acoustic analyses showed consistent differences in energy and formant center frequency amplitude of consonants and vowels, $F_1$ frequency of vowel and duration of voiceless stops suggesting the increase of vocal effort. The perceptual experiments in which 18 undergraduate female students learning French served as the subjects, were conducted in quiet and in 50, 60 dB of masking noise. The identification scores on consonants were higher in Lombard speech than in normal speech, suggesting that the speaker's vocal effort is useful to overcome the masking effect of noise. And, with increased noise level, the perceptual response to the French consonants given had a tendency to be complex and the subjective reaction score on the noise using the vocabulary representative of 'unpleasant' sensation to be higher. And, in the point of view on the L2(second language) acquisition, the influence of L1 (first language) on L2 examined in the perceptual result supports the interference theory.

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The effect of L2 experience on perception of Korean nasals

  • Yoo, Juyeon;Kang, Seokhan
    • 말소리와 음성과학
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    • 제8권4호
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    • pp.63-69
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    • 2016
  • Twenty five English native speakers with two different L2 experienced groups and nineteen native Koreans heard both Korean word-initial nasals (/m/ and /n/) in three vowel contexts (low, mid, and high) produced by a native Korean speaker. The experiment examined the hypothesis that Korean nasals are more likely to be judged or perceived correctly by the L2-experienced English learners of Korean than the unexperienced counterparts. The result showed that L2 experienced group was more sensitive to effects of vowel height in judging the Korean nasals in which the perception of nasals before the high vowels was more subject to it. In addition, place of nasal articulation causes asymmetry relations - bilabial nasal /m/ is more likely to be perceived as plosives rather than alveolar nasal /n/. The study found that the L2 experience has a somewhat limited role in perceiving the nasals correctly in the word-initial position, especially before the high vowels, in that even the L2 experienced English subjects have difficulty in identifying the Korean nasals correctly in this environment. Nevertheless, low L2 proficiency might be accounted for the difficulty in the bilabial nasal identification observed by the L2 experienced group.

A Study of the Effects of Similarity on L2 Phone Acquisition: An Experimental Study of the Korean Vowels Produced by Japanese Learners

  • Kwon, Sung-Mi
    • 음성과학
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    • 제14권1호
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    • pp.93-103
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    • 2007
  • The aims of this study were to examine the acoustic features of Korean and Japanese vowels, and to determine whether new phones that do not have counterparts in Japanese or similar phones that have counterparts improve more from learning. This study consisted of three parts. In Experiment I, a speech production test was performed to observe the acoustic features of Korean and Japanese vowels. In Experiment II, the speech production of Korean vowels produced by Koreans, advanced Japanese learners of Korean, and beginning Japanese learners of Korean was investigated. In Experiment III, a speech perception study of Korean vowels produced by the two Japanese learner groups was conducted to observe the effect of learning on acquiring L2 phones. The conclusion drawn from the study was that the similar phones produced by Japanese show more similarity with those of Koreans than new phones in terms of F1 and F2, but Japanese learners of Korean displayed more improvement in new phones from learning.

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