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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.37 557-563 June 1994.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Communication of Lexical Tones in Cantonese Alaryngeal Speech

Teresa Y. C. Ching 1
Rhys Williams 2

Andrew Van Hasselt 2

1 Department of English Chinese University of Hong Kong
2 Department of Surgery Chinese University of Hong Kong

Cantonese is a tone language with six lexical tones. Each word has a distinctive tone, signaled by fundamental frequency variations at the syllable level. We investigated the relative efficiency of alaryngeal Cantonese speakers in conveying tonal variations in words in citation form. Isolated tone tokens were produced by three esophageal speakers, two tracheoesophageal speakers, two pneumatic artificial laryngeal speakers, and two electrolaryngeal speakers for perceptual tests. The correct responses from 22 listeners were highest for the pneumatic artificial laryngeal speakers, and could be graded in order of proficiency as esophageal, tracheoesophageal, and electrolaryngeal speakers. These results provide a linguistic perspective for guiding voice rehabilitation and the choice of voice in alaryngeal patients who speak a tone language.

KEY WORDS: Cantonese tones, alaryngeal speech, lexical tone perception

Submitted on March 11, 1993
Accepted on January 4, 1994


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