The Second Language Acquisition of Mandarin Chinese Tones by English, Japanese and Korean Speakers

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The Second Language Acquisition of Mandarin Chinese Tones by English, Japanese and Korean Speakers The Second Language Acquisition of Mandarin Chinese Tones by English, Japanese and Korean Speakers Hang Zhang A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Linguistics. Chapel Hill 2013 Approved by Jennifer L. Smith Elliott Moreton Misha Becker Katya Pertsova Ji-Yeon Jo © 2013 Hang Zhang ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT HANG ZHANG: The Second Language Acquisition of Mandarin Chinese Tones by English, Japanese and Korean Speakers (Under the direction of Jennifer L. Smith) This dissertation explores the second language acquisition of Mandarin Chinese tones by speakers of non-tonal languages within the framework of Optimality Theory. The effects of three L1s are analyzed: American English, a stress-accent language; Tokyo Japanese, a lexical pitch accent language; and Seoul Korean, a non-stress and non-pitch accent language. The study tests for three possible sources of L2 tonal errors; namely, 1) universal phonological constraints (i.e. the Tonal Markedness Scale (TMS), the Obligatory Contour Principle (OCP), and Tone-Position Constraints (TPC)); 2) the transfer of L1 pitch patterns; and 3) a pedagogical problem of Tone 3. The data shows that these three factors jointly shape the properties of interlanguage grammars. This study finds that the TMS, the OCP, and TPC constrain L2 tone acquisition, but do so to varying degrees. Evidence is found that the TMS applies to both word- and sentence-level L2 productions. Some effects of the OCP are found to interact with the TMS and with L1 transfer effects. For example, patterns regarding tone pairs (more T1-T1 productions than T4-T4, and in turn more than T2- T2) can be attributed to either a case of the “emergence of the unmarked” interacting effects of the TMS and the OCP, or to local conjunction of the TMS. Learners are better at maintaining Rising (T2) at word- initial positions, but Falling (T4) at word-final positions. L2 learners often substitute other tones for target tones and the substitution patterns provide evidence for L1 transfer. For example, English speakers often use high falling tone while Japanese speakers tend to lengthen low tones to express monosyllabic narrow focus in sentences. This study found conflicting error and substitution patterns pertaining to Tone 3, as well as greater accuracy in processing Pre-T3 sandhi than the sandhi occurring elsewhere. This effect is argued to be attributed to the “T3 [214]-First” teaching method. iii In light of the three factors affecting L2 tone acquisition, this study proposes a constraint re- ranking model to provide a new way of viewing positive and negative transfer. It is demonstrated that some markedness constraints are promoted while some are demoted in the acquisition of tones. iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENT First and foremost, I would like to express my sincere thanks to my advisor, Dr. Jennifer Smith, for her inspiration, guidance, support, and patience. I cannot remember how many times Jen has rescued me and put me back on track. She is strict, but very understanding, approachable and always helpful. Jen is my role model for being a linguist, a mentor, and a teacher. Words fail to express my appreciation to her! I am exceedingly grateful to Dr. Elliott Moreton for his engaging discussions. His enthusiasm and love for linguistic research is contagious. I also greatly appreciate my other committee members, Dr. Katya Pertsova, Dr. Misha Becker, and Dr. Ji-Yeon Jo, for their great support and insightful suggestions. This project could not have been completed without the assistance of many people. This study relies heavily on the statistical analysis guided by Chris Wiesen, and I truly appreciate all of his hard work and patience. Special thanks are also due to Jia Lin for data analysis; Azusa Saito, Katsuhiko Sawamura, Jeehwae Kim, Seul Bee Lee, and Insun Lee for translating subject-recruitment documents and experiment reading materials into Japanese and Korean; the teaching staff at Zhejiang University (Hangzhou, China); and the 67 participants who agreed to be a part of this study. I especially appreciate Hong Shi, Linghong Huang, and Feiyan Wang, whose enormous amount of help with the collection of pilot data in 2011 has made this study possible. I don’t think I could have found a better fit for my grad career than UNC-Chapel Hill. This project is supported by the Center for Global Initiative (Pre-Dissertation Travel Award) and Graduate School (Dissertation Completion Fellowship). I would like to thank the entire Linguistics Department. This includes Professor Emeritus Craig Melchert, who helped me start in the Linguistics Department. I also truly appreciate the insightful comments and invaluable help given by my fellow grad cohort in our v P-side group (a UNC-CH phonetics/phonology research group)—Mary Kohn, Lúcia Fischer, Emily Moeng, Jen Griffin, Anna Powers, Amy Reynolds, Katherine Shaw, Matt Fuller, Justin Pinta, and other grads. Thank you all! I also owe a particular debt of gratitude to the Department of Asian Studies at UNC-CH for opportunities for professional and personal development during the past eight years. I am truly grateful to Dr. Gang Yue for the help he has given me to make my grad career at UNC possible. I also deeply appreciate Dr. Wendan Li’s consistent support for my full-time teaching position in the Asian Studies Department and my research. I still think fondly of my time talking with her in New West and over the phone. I would also like to thank Dr. Jan Bardsley very much for her support to my trip to China for data collection, and all my colleagues in Asian Studies for their professional support and friendship. I cannot end without thanking my family and friends. I dedicate this dissertation to my husband Jie Cai and my daughter Emma Xiaoman Cai. I have relied so much on their love and encouragement throughout my time conducting research. For so many weekends, Jie has taken Emma to libraries and playgrounds to allow me to concentrate on my research at home. I remember being five-months pregnant when I wrote the “acknowledgements” section for my Master’s thesis and now Emma is five years old. I know how long you two have been waiting for the day you can officially call me Driver (Dr.) Zhang. I finally earned the license! vi TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES ………………………………………………………………………………………..xii LIST OF FIGURES ………………………………………………………………………………...…... xiv LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS ………………………………………………………..xvi Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION ……………………………………………………………………..1 1.1. Overview …………………………………………………………………………..1 1.2. The significance of the study ……………………………………………………………...3 1.3. The theoretical context …………………………………………………………………….4 1.4. Research questions and general hypotheses …………………………………………….…6 1.5. The organization of the dissertation ………………………………………………….……9 2. PHONOLOGICAL BACKGROUND AND PREDICTIONS ………………………….……..10 2.1. Optimality Theory and the second language acquisition of Mandarin tones……………………………………………………………...…………10 2.1.1. Some basic concepts of Optimality Theory …………………………………...…….10 2.1.2. The OT grammars and Second Language Acquisition ……………………..……....15 2.2. The tone system of Mandarin Chinese ……………………………………………………21 2.2.1. Mandarin tonal features and representation ……………………………...………..21 2.2.2. Mandarin Tone Sandhi …………………………………………………………….25 2.2.2.1. Mandarin T3 Sandhi and the domain ………………………………………25 2.2.2.2. T3 and T3 Sandhi Pedagogy ……………………………………………….26 2.2.3. The perception of tones …………………………………………………………….28 2.2.4. Three phonological constraints relevant to Mandarin tone acquisition ……………31 vii 2.2.4.1. The Tonal Markedness Scale (TMS) ………………………………………32 2.2.4.2. Obligatory Contour Principle (OCP) ……………………………………....35 2.2.4.3. Tone-Position Constraints (TPC) ……………………………………….….38 2.3. Assumptions of prosodic structures and the stimulus sentence ……………………….….42 2.3.1. Assumptions of prosodic structures ……………………………………….……..…43 2.3.2. Factors affecting prosodic phrasing ………………………………………………...44 2.3.2.1. Syntactic structure ………………………………………………………..…44 2.3.2.2. Focus ………………………………………………………………………..46 2.3.3. Prosodic structure of the Mandarin stimulus sentence …………………………..…..49 2.4. The prosodic characteristics of the three first languages and predictions concerning each………………………………………………………………………...….51 2.4.1. Representation of intonation ………………………………………………………...52 2.4.2. English prosodic structures and predictions……………………………….................54 2.4.2.1. Prosodic phrasing of stimulus sentences for English speakers………………56 2.4.2.2. Tone assignment …………………………………………………………….56 2.4.3. Tokyo Japanese (Japanese) prosodic structures and predictions ……………………60 2.4.3.1. Japanese Speakers’ Prosodic Phrasing of Stimulus sentence ………………. 61 2.4.3.2. The assignment of tones to AP ………………………………………………63 2.4.4. Seoul Korean (Korean) prosodic structures and predictions ……………………......68 2.4.4.1. Predicted prosodic phrasing for Korean speakers …………………………....69 2.4.4.2. The tone assignment of test words for Korean Speakers …………………….70 2.4.5. Summary of L1 transfer predictions ………………………………………………...72 3. METHODOLOGY ………………………………………………………………………...…….74 3.1. Test materials …………………………………………………………………………...…74 3.2. Subjects and recording procedures ………………………………………………………..78 3.3. Judgment and data transcription ………………………………………………………..…80 viii 3.4. Data Analysis …………………………………………………………………………..….83 4. WORD-LEVEL EXPERIMENT RESULTS …………………………………………………....84 4.1. General information
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