Native vs non-native production of English vowels in spontaneous speech: an acoustic phonetic study

This study aims to examine acoustic characteristics of English vowels produced by 1 Australian English talker and 3 Japanese learners of English in spontaneous speech. Primary stressed vowels in multi-syllabic words were extracted from five 15minute interview sessions. While there was a considerable overlap between different vowel categories both in native and nonnative vowel spaces, centroids were more clearly separated in the former than in the latter. All three Japanese learners’ vowel spaces were widely spread in the F2 direction. The Australian talker showed a moderate spectral separation in two pairs /i */ and /a /. Although this appears contrary to the spectral overlap commonly reported for these pairs in Australian English, it is consistent with the notion that short vowels are more susceptible to reduction than their long counterparts which are less likely to be undershot in various consonantal contexts.