Dialectical Effects on Nasalance: A Multicenter, Cross-Continental Study

Author:

Awan Shaheen N.1,Bressmann Tim2,Poburka Bruce3,Roy Nelson4,Sharp Helen5,Watts Christopher6

Affiliation:

1. Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania

2. University of Toronto

3. Minnesota State University, Mankato

4. University of Utah, Salt Lake City

5. Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo

6. Texas Christian University, Fort Worth

Abstract

Purpose This study investigated nasalance in speakers from six different dialectal regions across North America using recent versions of the Nasometer. It was hypothesized that many of the sound changes observed in regional dialects of North American English would have a significant impact on measures of nasalance. Method Samples of the Zoo Passage, the Rainbow Passage, and the Nasal Sentences were collected from young adult male and female speakers ( N = 300) from six North American dialectical regions (Midland/Mid-Atlantic; Inland North Canada; Inland North; North Central; South; and Western dialects). Results Across the three passage types, effect sizes for dialect were moderate in strength and accounted for approximately 7%–9% of the variation in nasalance. Increased differences in nasalance tended to occur between speakers from distinctly different geographical regions, with the highest nasalance across all passages observed for speakers from the Texas South dialect region. Conclusion Clinicians and researchers who use perceptual and instrumental measures of speech production should be aware that dialectical and socially acquired speech patterns may influence the acoustic characteristics of speech and may also influence the interpretation of normative expectations and typical versus disordered cutoff scores for instruments such as the Nasometer.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

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