Lexical tone perception in Mandarin Chinese speakers with aphasia

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Date
2021-04-20
Authors
Li, Qiang
Wang, Shuang
Du, Yunling
Müller, Nicole
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De Gruyter
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Abstract
The brain localization debate of lexical tone processing concerns functional hypothesis that lexical tone, owing to its strong linguistic features, is dominant in the left hemisphere, and acoustic hypothesis that all pitch patterns, including lexical tone, are dominant in the right hemisphere due to their acoustic features. Lexical tone as a complex signal contains acoustic components that carry linguistic, paralinguistic, and nonlinguistic information. To examine these two hypotheses, the current study adopted triplet stimuli including Chinese characters, their corresponding pinyin with a diacritic, and the four diacritics representing Chinese lexical tones. The stimuli represent the variation of lexical tone for its linguistic and acoustic features. The results of a listening task by Mandarin Chinese speakers with and without aphasia support the functional hypothesis that pitch patterns are lateralized to different hemispheres of the brain depending on their functions, with lexical tone to the left hemisphere as a function of linguistic features.
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Pitch , Lexical tone , Brain lateralization , Mandarin Chinese , Pinyin
Citation
Li, Q., Wang, S., Du, Y. and Müller, Nicole (2021) 'Lexical tone perception in Mandarin Chinese speakers with aphasia', Chinese Journal of Applied Linguistics, 44(1), pp. 54-67. doi: 10.1515/CJAL-2021-0004
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© 2021, FLTRP, Walter de Gruyter, Cultural and Education Section British Embassy.