Previous articulatory studies on Japanese consonant length contrast suggest that the constriction gesture for geminates takes longer to reach its target than that for singletons. This difference in gestural timing has often been associated with pre-geminate vowel lengthening, which has also been shown to be one of the perceptual cues for gemination in Japanese. The acquisition of this cue may be particularly challenging for learners whose first language exhibits closed-syllable vowel shortening. However, the extent to which this articulatory pattern is acquired by L2 learners of Japanese remains unclear. This study examines the articulatory timing of Japanese geminate and singleton /t/ in native speakers of Standard Chinese learning Japanese at varying levels of proficiency, using ultrasound imaging. Results on tongue-raising gesture, obtained using the DeepLabCut plug-in in AAA Articulate Instruments, 2023, suggest that acquiring stable, native-like gestural timing may be challenging for learners, especially at lower proficiency levels. We discuss the relationship between the tongue tip gesture and acoustic durational correlates, as well as the potential influence of pitch-accent patterns.
Morimoto et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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