The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing

Musical training has been found to enhance the perception of non-native lexical tones, however, not much is known about how it may interact with other contextual factors such as linguistic experience to affect non-native lexical tone processing, and whether it may also enhance the production of non-...

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Main Author: Tan, Shen Hui
Other Authors: Alice Hiu Dan Chan
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103512
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47388
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1035122020-10-15T06:34:18Z The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing Tan, Shen Hui Alice Hiu Dan Chan School of Humanities DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics Musical training has been found to enhance the perception of non-native lexical tones, however, not much is known about how it may interact with other contextual factors such as linguistic experience to affect non-native lexical tone processing, and whether it may also enhance the production of non-native lexical tones. To better qualify the extent of its effect on non-native lexical tone processing, the independent and joint effects of musical training and linguistic experience on the perception and production of non-native lexical tones are explored in the present study. Four groups of participants were tested: Tone-language-speaking musicians (Tm), tone-language-speaking non-musicians (Tnm), non-tone-language-speaking musicians (NTm), and non-tone-language-speaking non-musicians (NTnm). In Experiment 1, participants discriminated non-native Thai lexical tones in three forms: normal Thai speech, low-pass filtered Thai speech, and violin analogues of the Thai speech. In Experiment 2, participants imitated Thai lexical tones, and their tone productions were evaluated via a tone identification task and a tone rating task by a separate group of native Thai informants. Results revealed no statistically significant independent or combined effects of musical training or language experience in both experiments. Across groups, participants generally had comparably good perception and production of the non-native Thai tones. As this was contrary to past findings, further investigations were conducted. Secondary data analysis using data from the study by Burnham et al. (2015) indicated that the lack of group differences in the perception task could not be attributed to enhancements in non-native lexical tone perception among non-tone participants as a result of long-term ambient exposure to tone languages. Meanwhile, further analysis conducted on the production task results using confusion matrices revealed that tone language speakers produced more confusable tones, especially if they were also non-musicians. This suggests an interaction effect of musical training with tone language experience in non-native lexical tone production, whereby the former mitigates disadvantages caused by the latter. Given this finding, the statistically non-significant results of both experiments were most probably due to insufficient task difficulty, as well as a lack of sensitivity of accuracy rates as a measure of participants’ performance. Overall, although the current study did not replicate past findings of a facilitatory effect of musical training on non-native lexical tone perception, it shed some light on the conditions for this effect to be manifested instead. Notably, it presents novel findings of an interaction between musical training and tone language experience during non-native lexical tone production which demonstrates that the benefits of musical training to non-native lexical tone processing not only extend beyond perception to production but can also be experienced by tone language speakers. The current study thus contributes to our understanding of when and how musical training may interact with linguistic experience to affect non-native lexical tone processing, which has practical implications on the second language (L2) acquisition of tone languages. Master of Arts 2019-01-04T14:48:39Z 2019-12-06T21:14:16Z 2019-01-04T14:48:39Z 2019-12-06T21:14:16Z 2018 Thesis Tan, S. H. (2018). The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103512 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47388 10.32657/10220/47388 en 156 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
Tan, Shen Hui
The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
description Musical training has been found to enhance the perception of non-native lexical tones, however, not much is known about how it may interact with other contextual factors such as linguistic experience to affect non-native lexical tone processing, and whether it may also enhance the production of non-native lexical tones. To better qualify the extent of its effect on non-native lexical tone processing, the independent and joint effects of musical training and linguistic experience on the perception and production of non-native lexical tones are explored in the present study. Four groups of participants were tested: Tone-language-speaking musicians (Tm), tone-language-speaking non-musicians (Tnm), non-tone-language-speaking musicians (NTm), and non-tone-language-speaking non-musicians (NTnm). In Experiment 1, participants discriminated non-native Thai lexical tones in three forms: normal Thai speech, low-pass filtered Thai speech, and violin analogues of the Thai speech. In Experiment 2, participants imitated Thai lexical tones, and their tone productions were evaluated via a tone identification task and a tone rating task by a separate group of native Thai informants. Results revealed no statistically significant independent or combined effects of musical training or language experience in both experiments. Across groups, participants generally had comparably good perception and production of the non-native Thai tones. As this was contrary to past findings, further investigations were conducted. Secondary data analysis using data from the study by Burnham et al. (2015) indicated that the lack of group differences in the perception task could not be attributed to enhancements in non-native lexical tone perception among non-tone participants as a result of long-term ambient exposure to tone languages. Meanwhile, further analysis conducted on the production task results using confusion matrices revealed that tone language speakers produced more confusable tones, especially if they were also non-musicians. This suggests an interaction effect of musical training with tone language experience in non-native lexical tone production, whereby the former mitigates disadvantages caused by the latter. Given this finding, the statistically non-significant results of both experiments were most probably due to insufficient task difficulty, as well as a lack of sensitivity of accuracy rates as a measure of participants’ performance. Overall, although the current study did not replicate past findings of a facilitatory effect of musical training on non-native lexical tone perception, it shed some light on the conditions for this effect to be manifested instead. Notably, it presents novel findings of an interaction between musical training and tone language experience during non-native lexical tone production which demonstrates that the benefits of musical training to non-native lexical tone processing not only extend beyond perception to production but can also be experienced by tone language speakers. The current study thus contributes to our understanding of when and how musical training may interact with linguistic experience to affect non-native lexical tone processing, which has practical implications on the second language (L2) acquisition of tone languages.
author2 Alice Hiu Dan Chan
author_facet Alice Hiu Dan Chan
Tan, Shen Hui
format Theses and Dissertations
author Tan, Shen Hui
author_sort Tan, Shen Hui
title The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
title_short The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
title_full The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
title_fullStr The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
title_full_unstemmed The role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
title_sort role of musical training and linguistic experience in non-native lexical tone processing
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103512
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47388
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