4.2 Article

Phonetic convergence to non-native speech: Acoustic and perceptual evidence

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHONETICS
Volume 88, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.wocn.2021.101076

Keywords

Vocal accommodation; Phonetic convergence; Non-native speech; Shadowing; Acoustic analysis; AXB task

Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [VIDI-276-89-006]

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Research shows that native speakers may phonetically converge to non-native speakers, even without socio-communicative motivation. The study found that participants were less likely to converge when they rated the non-native accent as stronger.
While the tendency of speakers to align their speech to that of others acoustic-phonetically has been widely stud-ied among native speakers, very few studies have examined whether natives phonetically converge to non-native speakers. Here we measured native Dutch speakers' convergence to a non-native speaker with an unfamiliar accent in a novel non-interactive task. Furthermore, we assessed the role of participants' perceptions of the non-native accent in their tendency to converge. In addition to a perceptual measure (AXB ratings), we examined convergence on different acoustic dimensions (e.g., vowel spectra, fricative CoG, speech rate, overall f0) to deter-mine what dimensions, if any, speakers converge to. We further combined these two types of measures to dis-cover what dimensions weighed in raters' judgments of convergence. The results reveal overall convergence to our non-native speaker, as indexed by both perceptual and acoustic measures. However, the ratings suggest the stronger participants rated the non-native accent to be, the less likely they were to converge. Our findings add to the growing body of evidence that natives can phonetically converge to non-native speech, even without any apparent socio-communicative motivation to do so. We argue that our results are hard to integrate with a purely social view of convergence. (c) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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