Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult

An acoustic-perceptual investigation was performed on fundamental frequency (F 0 ) contours associated with lexical tones in the speech of one 21-year-old adult speaker of Thai who did not start speaking until age 7. Thai is a tone language with five lexically contrastive tones-mid, low, falling, hi...

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Main Authors: Jack Gandour, Soranee Holasuit Petty, Rochana Dardarananda
Other Authors: Purdue University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/15752
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spelling th-mahidol.157522018-06-14T16:17:48Z Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult Jack Gandour Soranee Holasuit Petty Rochana Dardarananda Purdue University Mahidol University Health Professions Medicine Social Sciences An acoustic-perceptual investigation was performed on fundamental frequency (F 0 ) contours associated with lexical tones in the speech of one 21-year-old adult speaker of Thai who did not start speaking until age 7. Thai is a tone language with five lexically contrastive tones-mid, low, falling, high, and rising. Measures of F, were taken from a minimal set of five monosyllabic citation forms. Results from phonemic identification tests indicated that AY exhibited a selective disruption in the production of Thai tones. In contrast to the normal Thai tone space, AY's tone space was reduced to three tones-mid, low, and rising. Acoustic analysis revealed that AYï? 1/2 s aberrant F 0 contours for the falling and high tones were virtually identical in terms of height and overall shape; both exhibited a slow, steady fall in F 0 in the upper range of AY's tone space. Listeners' failure to perceive AY's intended productions of the falling and high tones confirmed the perceptual importance of rapid change in F 0 slope in the Thai tone space. Findings are discussed with reference to the chronological order in which Thai tones are acquired in normal language development. © 1989 Informa UK Ltd All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or part not permitted. 2018-06-14T09:13:59Z 2018-06-14T09:13:59Z 1989-01-01 Article Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics. Vol.3, No.2 (1989), 191-202 10.3109/02699208908985281 02699206 2-s2.0-0024555186 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/15752 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=0024555186&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Health Professions
Medicine
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Health Professions
Medicine
Social Sciences
Jack Gandour
Soranee Holasuit Petty
Rochana Dardarananda
Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
description An acoustic-perceptual investigation was performed on fundamental frequency (F 0 ) contours associated with lexical tones in the speech of one 21-year-old adult speaker of Thai who did not start speaking until age 7. Thai is a tone language with five lexically contrastive tones-mid, low, falling, high, and rising. Measures of F, were taken from a minimal set of five monosyllabic citation forms. Results from phonemic identification tests indicated that AY exhibited a selective disruption in the production of Thai tones. In contrast to the normal Thai tone space, AY's tone space was reduced to three tones-mid, low, and rising. Acoustic analysis revealed that AYï? 1/2 s aberrant F 0 contours for the falling and high tones were virtually identical in terms of height and overall shape; both exhibited a slow, steady fall in F 0 in the upper range of AY's tone space. Listeners' failure to perceive AY's intended productions of the falling and high tones confirmed the perceptual importance of rapid change in F 0 slope in the Thai tone space. Findings are discussed with reference to the chronological order in which Thai tones are acquired in normal language development. © 1989 Informa UK Ltd All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or part not permitted.
author2 Purdue University
author_facet Purdue University
Jack Gandour
Soranee Holasuit Petty
Rochana Dardarananda
format Article
author Jack Gandour
Soranee Holasuit Petty
Rochana Dardarananda
author_sort Jack Gandour
title Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
title_short Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
title_full Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
title_fullStr Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
title_full_unstemmed Tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
title_sort tonal disruption in the speech of a language-delayed thai adult
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/15752
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