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KMID : 0917519990060010197
Journal of Speech Sciences
1999 Volume.6 No. 1 p.197 ~ p.217
Noise Effects on Foreign Language Learning
ÀÓÀº¼ö/Lim, Eun Su
±èÇö±â/±èº´»ï/±èÁ¾±³/Kim, Hyun Gi/Kim, Byung Sam/Kim, Jong Kyo
Abstract
In a noisy class, the acoustic-phonetic features of the teacher and the perceptual features of learners are changed comparison with a quiet environment. Acoustical analyses were carried out on a set of French monosyllables consisting of 17 consonants and three vowel /a, e, i/, produced by 1 male speaker talking in quiet and in 50, 60 and 70 dB SPL of masking noise on headphone. The results of the acoustic analyses showed consistent differences in energy and formant center frequency amplitude of consonants and vowels, F_1 frequency of vowel and duration of voiceless stops suggesting the increase of vocal effort.
The perceptual experiments in which 18 undergraduate female students learning French served as the subjects, were conducted in quiet and in 50, 60 dB of masking noise. The identification scores on consonants were higher in Lombard speech than in normal speech, suggesting that the speaker¢¥s vocal effort is useful to overcome the masking effect of noise. And, with increased noise level, the perceptual response to the French consonants given had a tendency to be complex and the subjective reaction score on the noise using the vocabulary representative of "unpleasant" sensation to be higher. And, in the point of view on the L2(second language) acquisition, the influence of L1(first language) on L2 examined in the perceptual result supports the interference theory.
Keywords: Lombard speech, class, L2 acquisition, noise, perception
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