Exploring the effects of accent on cognitive processes: behavioral and electrophysiological insights

Abstract

167 p.Previous research has found that speaker accent can have an impact on a range of offline and online cognitive processes (Baus, Bas, Calabria, & Costa, 2017; McAleer, Todorov, & Belin, 2014; Stevenage, Clarke, & McNeill, 2012; Sporer, 2001). Indeed, previous studies show that there are differences in native and non-native speech processing (Lev-Ari, 2018). Processing foreign-accented speech requires the listener to adapt to an extra range of variability, suggesting that there may be an increase in the amount of attentional and cognitive resources that are needed to successfully interpret the speech signal of a foreign-accented speaker. However, less is known about the differences between processing native and dialectal accents. Is dialectal processing more similar to foreign or native speech? To address this, two theories have been proposed (Clarke & Garrett, 2004; Floccia et al, 2009). Previous studies have contributed to the plausibility of both hypotheses and importantly for the purposes of this project, previous electroencephalography experiments exploring the question have mainly used sentences as material. More studies are needed to elucidate whether foreign accent is processed uniquely from all types of native speech (both native and dialectal accents) or whether dialectal accent is treated differently from native accent, despite both being native speech variations. Accordingly, the central aim of this dissertation is to further investigate processing mechanisms of speech accent across different levels of linguistic analysis using evidence from both behavioral and electrophysiological experiments. An additional aim of this project was to look at the effects of accent on information retention. In addition to fluctuations in attentional demands, it seems that non-native accent can lead to differences in the depth of listeners¿ memory encoding (Atkinson et al., 2005). This project further aimed to study how changing the accent of the information delivered may affect how well people remember the information received. Three experiments were carried out to investigate accent processing, results and future directions are discussed

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