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1.2 Allaphone

In phonology, an allophone (/ˈæləfoʊn/; from the Greek ἄλλος, állos, "other" and φωνή, phōnē, "voice, sound") is one of a set of multiple possible spoken sounds, or phones, or signs used to pronounce a single phoneme in a particular language. For example, in English, [t] (as in stop [stɒp]) and the aspirated form [tʰ] (as in top [ˈtʰɒp]) are allophones for the phoneme /t/, while these two are considered to be different phonemes in some languages such as Thai and Hindi. On the other hand, in Spanish, [d] (as in dolor [doˈloɾ]) and [ð] (as in nada [ˈnaða]) are allophones for the phoneme/d/, while these two are considerd to be different phonemes in Eglish.



The specific allophone selected in a given situation is often predictable from the phonetic context, with such allophones being called positional variants, but some allophones occur in free variation. Replacing a sound by another allophone of the same phoneme usually does not change the meaning of a word, but the result may sound non-native or even unintelligible.

Native speakers of a given language perceive one phoneme in the language as a single distinctive sound and are "both unaware of and even shocked by" the allophone variations that are used to pronounce single phonemes. Christina E Shea said that "The phonological environment can include sounds directly adjacent to the sound itself, sounds that occur at a predetermined distance from it, as well as the prosodic structure that directly contains the sound, such as the syllable, the foot or the prosodic word (Hall, 2009). Part of learning an allophonic dis-tribution of this type involves connecting the correct allophone to its phonological environ-ment, or context.1In this article we examine the role of contextual factors in the production of speech sounds, focusing on second language (L2) learners’ ability to produce appropriate allophones in the expected context. Further, we explore whether learning an allophonic alternation happens in an across-the-board fashion. "10 There is an important a priori reason to favour the allophone as the pre-lexical representation in speech recognition. The primary function of pre-lexical processing is to help the listener solve the invariance problem. The invariance problem is arguably the central problem of speech perception, that there are no physically invariant cues that go along with any given unit of speech. The speech signal varies enormously (as a function of talker and style differences, phonological context effects, background noise and so on) and yet the listener needs to be able to recognise the words the talker intends despite this variability. Pre-lexical representations of the segmental content of the incoming speech signal provide a means for phonological abstraction, linking between the variable input and the (phonologically abstract) mental lexicon. On this view, context-dependent allophonic units are more plausible than context￾independent phonemic units precisely because speech segments are not context independent. As noted above English /l/, for example, has light (syllable-initial) and dark (syllable-final) allophonic variants. Variability about light [l] may be irrelevant and potentially even misleading for the recognition of dark [ɫ], and vice versa. If listeners have allophonic units, they could optimize the mapping of the input onto the lexicon for each allophone separately. This would be harder to achieve with phonemic units. In short, the listener needs to track the acoustic variability relevant for word recognition, and those acoustics are not always position-invariant. Evidence from perceptual learning supports the allophonic account (Mitterer et al., 2013). As Mitterer et al. argued, perceptual-learning paradigms can be used to address this issue because these paradigms reveal the units that are functional in solving the invariance problem. In the paradigm as first used by Norris et al. (2003), participants learn about an unusual pronunciation of a given segment. In the original study this was a fricative that was perceptually ambiguous between /f/ and /s/ (henceforth [s/f] and analogously for other segments). Participants heard this segment either replacing /s/ in /s/-final ” .11


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