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KMID : 1022420230150030045
Phonetics and Speech Sciences
2023 Volume.15 No. 3 p.45 ~ p.52
Executive function and Korean children¡¯s stop production
Kong Eun-Jong

Lee Hyun-Jung
Jeffrey J. Holliday
Abstract
Previous studies have established a role for cognitive differences in explaining variability in speech processing across individuals. In the case of perceptual cue weighting in the context of a sound change, studies have produced conflicting results regarding the relationship between executive function and the use of redundant cues. The current study aimed to explore this relationship in acoustic cue weighting during speech production. Forty-one Korean-speaking children read a list of stop-initial words and completed two tests that assess executive function, i.e., Dimensional Change Card Sorting (DCCS) and digit n-back. Voice onset time (VOT) and fundamental frequency (F0) were measured in each word, and analyses were carried out to determine the extent to which children¡¯s executive function predicted their use of both informative and less informative cues to the three pairs comprising the Korean three-way stop laryngeal contrast. No evidence was found for a relationship between cognitive ability and acoustic cue weighting in production, which is at odds with previous, albeit conflicting, results for speech perception. While this result may be due to the lack of task demands in the production task used here, it nevertheless expands the empirical ground upon which future work in this area may proceed.
KEYWORD
acoustic cue weighting, executive function, stop laryngeal contrast, sound change in progress, voice onset time (VOT), fundamental frequency (F0), child speech production
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