Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes

The present study deals with the perception of an English phonemic contrast of /b/ and /v/ (as in boat and vote) by Filipinos living in Singapore and the Philippines who are familiar with English and at least one language of the Philippines. A principal component analysis was done to create a compos...

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Main Author: Paca, Angelie Marie Galang
Other Authors: Suzy Styles
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175474
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1754742024-04-28T15:32:39Z Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes Paca, Angelie Marie Galang Suzy Styles School of Social Sciences Brain, Language and Intersensory Perception (BLIP) suzy.styles@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Categorical perception Bilingualism Outer circle English Phoneme perception The present study deals with the perception of an English phonemic contrast of /b/ and /v/ (as in boat and vote) by Filipinos living in Singapore and the Philippines who are familiar with English and at least one language of the Philippines. A principal component analysis was done to create a composite score of language dominance for each of the participants based on their responses to a language background questionnaire. As /b/ and /v/ are not phonemically contrasted in most languages of the Philippines, it was hypothesized that participants who were more dominant in English would be better than those who were more dominant in a language of the Philippines at discriminating between /b/ and /v/ in an auditory discrimination task. As no significant effect of language dominance on accuracy and reaction time was observed, the hypothesis was not supported. However, an exploratory analysis identified several variables in the language background questionnaire that had significant correlations with either accuracy and reaction time, making them promising candidates for future research on categorical perception of phonemes on multilinguals. These variables include age at which English was first learnt, years spent in a region where English is the dominant language, years spent in a workplace where a language of the Philippines is the dominant language, percentage of time speaking to friends in English and percentage of time spent consuming media in English. Bachelor's degree 2024-04-24T13:25:09Z 2024-04-24T13:25:09Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Paca, A. M. G. (2024). Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175474 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175474 en 10.21979/N9/PXDSGA 10.21979/N9/PNBXYU 10.21979/N9/JAS2OD application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Categorical perception
Bilingualism
Outer circle English
Phoneme perception
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Categorical perception
Bilingualism
Outer circle English
Phoneme perception
Paca, Angelie Marie Galang
Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes
description The present study deals with the perception of an English phonemic contrast of /b/ and /v/ (as in boat and vote) by Filipinos living in Singapore and the Philippines who are familiar with English and at least one language of the Philippines. A principal component analysis was done to create a composite score of language dominance for each of the participants based on their responses to a language background questionnaire. As /b/ and /v/ are not phonemically contrasted in most languages of the Philippines, it was hypothesized that participants who were more dominant in English would be better than those who were more dominant in a language of the Philippines at discriminating between /b/ and /v/ in an auditory discrimination task. As no significant effect of language dominance on accuracy and reaction time was observed, the hypothesis was not supported. However, an exploratory analysis identified several variables in the language background questionnaire that had significant correlations with either accuracy and reaction time, making them promising candidates for future research on categorical perception of phonemes on multilinguals. These variables include age at which English was first learnt, years spent in a region where English is the dominant language, years spent in a workplace where a language of the Philippines is the dominant language, percentage of time speaking to friends in English and percentage of time spent consuming media in English.
author2 Suzy Styles
author_facet Suzy Styles
Paca, Angelie Marie Galang
format Final Year Project
author Paca, Angelie Marie Galang
author_sort Paca, Angelie Marie Galang
title Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes
title_short Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes
title_full Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes
title_fullStr Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes
title_full_unstemmed Influence of language dominance on Filipinos' categorical perception of English phonemes
title_sort influence of language dominance on filipinos' categorical perception of english phonemes
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175474
_version_ 1800916280243388416