Idemaru, Kaori Holt, Lori Relational Timing or Absolute Duration? Cue Weighting in the Perception of Japanese Singleton-Geminate Stops Relational timing has been proposed as a solution to the problem of variability across durational properties of speech arising with changes in speaking rate. The current study investigates the role of absolute and relational timing cues in perception of Japanese stop length (singleton/ geminate) categorization. Absolute (stop duration) and relational (ratio of stop duration to preceding mora duration) duration cues were independently varied in a categorization test. Although Ratio was shown previously to classify speakers’ productions more accurately (Idemaru, 2005), listeners’ category responses showed strong individual differences in cue use. These results demonstrate that a highly reliable acoustic cue in the distribution of cues available in speech production does not necessarily predict its primacy in speech perception. perception;cue weighting;Japanese 2007-08-01
    https://kilthub.cmu.edu/articles/journal_contribution/Relational_Timing_or_Absolute_Duration_Cue_Weighting_in_the_Perception_of_Japanese_Singleton-Geminate_Stops/6617903
10.1184/R1/6617903.v1