Too little, too late: A longitudinal study of English corrective focus by Mandarin speakers

Authors

  • Alex Hong-Lun Yeung Stony Brook University
  • Hyunah Baek Stony Brook University
  • Chikako Takahashi Stony Brook University
  • Stephen Buttner
  • Jiwon Hwang Stony Brook University
  • Ellen Broselow Stony Brook University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v5i1.4727

Keywords:

Prosody, corrective focus, second language production, English, Mandarin

Abstract

This study tracks the production of English corrective focus by Mandarin speakers (MS) living in the US over a two-year period. We show that the MS differed from English speakers (ES) in the alignment of the corrective focus pitch accent: while ES productions typically showed a pitch peak on the stressed syllable, followed by an abrupt fall, the pitch rise and fall for MS was later and less steep. While the MS productions became more English-like over time in some respects, the failure to correctly align pitch accent persisted over time. We argue that this misalignment of pitch peak cannot be attributed to a lack of sensitivity to English stress, but rather represents a common failure to master the complex timing patterns involved in synchronizing pitch, intensity, and duration cues with segmental structure in a second language.

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Published

2020-03-23

How to Cite

Yeung, Alex Hong-Lun, Hyunah Baek, Chikako Takahashi, Stephen Buttner, Jiwon Hwang, and Ellen Broselow. 2020. “Too Little, Too Late: A Longitudinal Study of English Corrective Focus by Mandarin Speakers”. Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 5 (1): 270–281. https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v5i1.4727.