The acquisition of temporal categorical perception by Japanese second language learners

Authors

  • Naoko Kinoshita Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, University of Tokyo, Japan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2008/02/0031/000090

Keywords:

categorical perception, rhythm, language acquisition, mora timing

Abstract

This study reports research into the development of perception of special mora categories by Korean learners of Japanese as a second language. First, a test which measured boundary width and the boundary point of distinction between singletons and special mora was used to establish participants’ categorical perception across four levels of proficiency. Then a two year longitudinal study followed the development of 14 learners, during which time the same test was administered three times. The results demonstrated: 1) that the special mora perceptual categories of second language learners developed in some areas, but not in others and 2) that there was a categorization of the special mora over time.

 

References

Kinoshita, N. 2007. The Acquisition Processes of the Perception of Japanese Long and Short Vowels: The Case of Korean Learners of Japanese as a Second Language. The Korean Journal of Japanology, 72, 1-12.

Nishigori, J., Hwan, Y., Park, Y. 2002. Kankokujin gakusyusya no Nihongo sokuon no chikaku ni kansuru kenkyu: gakusyu reberubetsu tokusei to bogo niyoru setsumei no kouka. Nihongo Kenkyu, 22, 103-118.

Ryalls, J. 1996. A Basic Introduction to Speech Perception. Tokyo: Kaibundo.

Toda, T. 1998. Perceptual categorization of the durational contrasts by Japanese learners. Studies in Language and Literature, 33, University of Tsukuba, 65-82.

Uchida, T. 1998. Categorical Perception of Relatively Steady-Static Speech Duration in Japanese Moraic Phonemes. Journal of Phonetic Society of Japan, 2-3, 71-86.

Downloads

Published

01-01-2008

How to Cite

The acquisition of temporal categorical perception by Japanese second language learners. (2008). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 2(1), 121-124. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2008/02/0031/000090

Share

Similar Articles

21-30 of 377

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.