47 results on '"Yoneyama, Kiyoko"'
Search Results
2. Indexical Effects in Cross-Language Speech Perception
3. Is secondary stress phonetically real for second-language learners? Evidence from Japanese-accented English
4. How We Hear What Is Hardly There: Mechanisms Underlying Compensation for /t/-Reduction in Speech Comprehension
5. Experimental design
6. exploring-features
7. Perceptual judgments of sibilant fricatives: A cross-linguistic perspective
8. Effects of Japanese Prosody on English Word Production: Interaction between Voicing and Gemination
9. Lexically conditioned phonetic variation: A test with the voicing contrast in Japanese
10. Perception of Non-Contrastive Variations in American English by Japanese Learners: Flaps are Less Favored Than Stops
11. The influence of lexical characteristics and talker accent on the recognition of English words by speakers of Japanese
12. Perception of American English alveolar stops and flaps by Japanese learners of English: Does allophonic variation matter?
13. Production of an Allophonic Variant in a Second Language: The Case of Intervocalic Alveolar Flapping
14. Foreign accentedness of English sentences spoken by Japanese EFL learners and Japanese teachers of English: A first report
15. Speech segmentation by Japanese listeners
16. Age- and gender-related variation in voiced stop prenasalization in Japanese
17. Production of a non-phonemic variant in a second language: Acoustic analysis of Japanese speakers’ production of American English flap
18. The influence of lexical factors on word recognition by native English speakers and Japanese speakers acquiring English: An interim report
19. Durational characteristics of English by Chinese learners of English: A case of the northeast dialect speakers of Chinese
20. Deriving functional load of phonemes from a prosodically extended neighborhood analysis
21. Language specificity in the perception of children's productions of /t/ and /k/
22. Lexical influences on response times in Japanese listeners’ recognition of spoken English words.
23. An effect of phoneme frequency on stop place perception by English‐speaking and Japanese‐speaking listeners.
24. Language specificity in the perception of voiceless sibilant fricatives in Japanese and English: Implications for cross-language differences in speech-sound development
25. Lexical familiarity affects Japanese speakers' perception of /b/ and /v/.
26. Recognizing English words by Japanese speakers
27. The recognition of Japanese-accented and unaccented English words by Japanese listeners
28. A cross-linguistic study of diphthongs in spoken word processing in Japanese and English
29. Spoken word recognition in English by Japanese listeners: A case of Japanese-accented and unaccented English words
30. An evaluation of the semantic categorization task in Japanese word recognition
31. Similarities of words in noise in Japanese
32. Phonological neighborhoods and phonetic similarity in spoken word recognition
33. Neighborhood effects in Japanese word recognition
34. A computational analysis of uniqueness points for Japanese auditory word recognition
35. Listeners’ representations of within‐word structure of native and nonnative words by Japanese speakers
36. Can English listeners learning Japanese as a second language employ a mora‐based segmentation procedure?
37. Phonological units in speech segmentation and phonological awareness
38. An instance‐based model of Japanese speech recognition by native and non‐native listeners
39. Non‐native listeners’ representations of within‐word structure
40. A cross‐linguistic study of diphthongs in spoken word processing in Japanese and English
41. A moraic duration in speech processing in Japanese
42. The representation of Japanese moraic nasals
43. Can a moraic nasal occur word-initially in Japanese?
44. Segmentation strategies for spoken language recognition: evidence from semi-bilingual Japanese speakers of English
45. A moraic nasal and a syllable structure in Japanese
46. Language specificity in the perception of voiceless sibilant fricatives in Japanese and English: Implications for cross-language differences in speech-sound development.
47. Phonological neighborhoods and phonetic similarity in Japanese word recognition /
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