Rises and Falls in Dutch and Mandarin Chinese

Publication date

2014

Authors

Chen, AoISNI 0000000419520081
Chen, AojuORCID 0000-0002-6745-9794ISNI 0000000044916097
Kager, RenéORCID 0000-0002-5811-839XISNI 0000000110640747
Wong, Patrick

Editors

Gussenhoven, C.
Chen, Y.
Dediu, D.

Advisors

Supervisors

DOI

Document Type

Part of book
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Abstract

Despite of the different functions of pitch in tone and nontone languages, rises and falls are common pitch patterns across different languages. In the current study, we ask what is the language specific phonetic realization of rises and falls. Chinese and Dutch speakers participated in a production experiment. We used contexts composed for conveying specific communicative purposes to elicit rises and falls. We measured both tonal alignment and tonal scaling for both patterns. For the alignment measurements, we found language specific patterns for the rises, but for falls. For rises, both peak and valley were aligned later among Chinese speakers compared to Dutch speakers. For all the scaling measurements (maximum pitch, minimum pitch, and pitch range), no language specific patterns were found for either the rises or the falls.

Keywords

alignment, scaling, lexical tone, pitch accent, tone language, non-tone language

Citation

Chen, A, Chen, A, Kager, R & Wong, P 2014, Rises and Falls in Dutch and Mandarin Chinese. in C Gussenhoven, Y Chen & D Dediu (eds), TAL-2014 : The 4th International Symposium on Tonal Aspects of Languages, Nijmegen, The Netherlands, May 13-16, 2014. ISCA Archive, pp. 83-86, The Fourth International Symposium on Tonal Aspects of Languages (TAL 2014) , Nijmegen, Netherlands, 13/05/14. < http://www.isca-speech.org/archive/tal_2014 >, conference