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Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English

This data article provides acoustic data for individual speakers’ production of coda voicing contrast between stops in English, which are based on laboratory speech recorded by twelve native speakers of American English and twenty-four Korean learners of English. There were four pairs of English mon...

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Autores principales: Kim, Sahyang, Choi, Jiyoun, Cho, Taehong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9803920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36593767
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2022.108816
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author Kim, Sahyang
Choi, Jiyoun
Cho, Taehong
author_facet Kim, Sahyang
Choi, Jiyoun
Cho, Taehong
author_sort Kim, Sahyang
collection PubMed
description This data article provides acoustic data for individual speakers’ production of coda voicing contrast between stops in English, which are based on laboratory speech recorded by twelve native speakers of American English and twenty-four Korean learners of English. There were four pairs of English monosyllabic target words with voicing contrast in the coda position (bet-bed, pet-ped, bat-bad, pat-pad). The words were produced in carrier sentences in which they were placed in two different prosodic boundary conditions (Intonational Phrase initial and Intonation Phrase medial), two pitch accent conditions (nuclear-pitch accented and unaccented), and three focus conditions (lexical focus, phonological focus and no focus). The raw acoustic measurement values that are included in a CSV-formated file are F0, F1, F2 and duration of each vowel preceding a coda consonant; and Voice Onset Time of word-initial stops. This article also provides figures that exemplify individual speaker variation of vowel duration, F0, F1 and F2 as a function of focus conditions. The data can thus be potentially reused to observe individual variations in phonetic encoding of coda voicing contrast as a function of the aforementioned prosodically-conditioned factors (i.e., prosodic boundary, pitch accent, focus) in native vs. non-native English. Some theoretical aspects of the data are discussed in the full-length article entitled “Phonetic encoding of coda voicing contrast under different focus conditions in L1 vs. L2 English” [1].
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spelling pubmed-98039202023-01-01 Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English Kim, Sahyang Choi, Jiyoun Cho, Taehong Data Brief Data Article This data article provides acoustic data for individual speakers’ production of coda voicing contrast between stops in English, which are based on laboratory speech recorded by twelve native speakers of American English and twenty-four Korean learners of English. There were four pairs of English monosyllabic target words with voicing contrast in the coda position (bet-bed, pet-ped, bat-bad, pat-pad). The words were produced in carrier sentences in which they were placed in two different prosodic boundary conditions (Intonational Phrase initial and Intonation Phrase medial), two pitch accent conditions (nuclear-pitch accented and unaccented), and three focus conditions (lexical focus, phonological focus and no focus). The raw acoustic measurement values that are included in a CSV-formated file are F0, F1, F2 and duration of each vowel preceding a coda consonant; and Voice Onset Time of word-initial stops. This article also provides figures that exemplify individual speaker variation of vowel duration, F0, F1 and F2 as a function of focus conditions. The data can thus be potentially reused to observe individual variations in phonetic encoding of coda voicing contrast as a function of the aforementioned prosodically-conditioned factors (i.e., prosodic boundary, pitch accent, focus) in native vs. non-native English. Some theoretical aspects of the data are discussed in the full-length article entitled “Phonetic encoding of coda voicing contrast under different focus conditions in L1 vs. L2 English” [1]. Elsevier 2022-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9803920/ /pubmed/36593767 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2022.108816 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Data Article
Kim, Sahyang
Choi, Jiyoun
Cho, Taehong
Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English
title Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English
title_full Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English
title_fullStr Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English
title_full_unstemmed Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English
title_short Data on English coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by American English speakers and Korean learners of English
title_sort data on english coda voicing contrast under different prosodic conditions produced by american english speakers and korean learners of english
topic Data Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9803920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36593767
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2022.108816
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