PAMLab at Northwestern
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This week, Prof. Chang is giving a colloquium at Northwestern University. The presentation, scheduled for April 12, is entitled “Integration, change, and stability in bilingual speech perception”.

A research cluster in the Department of Linguistics and Translation
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Published:
This week, Prof. Chang is giving a colloquium at Northwestern University. The presentation, scheduled for April 12, is entitled “Integration, change, and stability in bilingual speech perception”.
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Published:
Prof. Yao Yao, PhD student Meixian (Vicky) Li, and Prof. Chang just published a new open-access article entitled “Social perception of creaky voice in Mandarin Chinese: Everyone’s gender matters” in Humanities and Social Sciences Communications!
Abstract: Recent years have witnessed increasing interest in the social meanings of non-modal voice qualities, but most existing studies focus on English, especially in the North American context. This paper reports a perceptual study of the social meanings of creaky voice in Mandarin Chinese for mainland Chinese listeners. The study used a large set of resynthesized stimuli including multiple talkers and pairs of utterances differing only in voice quality (creaky vs. modal). Sixty Mandarin listeners completed a social perception experiment in which they collectively evaluated 38 talkers (presented in creaky or modal voice quality) on four socio-demographic dimensions (age, gender, sexuality, education) and 19 traits related to personality (e.g., confident, genuine, pretentious) and communicative style (e.g., engaging). Results of a factor analysis and mixed-effects models indicated multiple effects of creaky voice on the perception of talker age, gender, and warmth; further, these effects interacted with both talker gender and listener gender, in ways that often differed from previously documented patterns for North American English. These findings shed light on the multifaceted indexicality of creaky voice in Mandarin and contribute to mounting evidence of crosslinguistic and crosscultural variation in the social meanings of non-modal voice qualities.
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PhD students Jupitara Ray and Meixian (Vicky) Li are both presenting posters at the upcoming 20th Annual Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon 20) in Montreal!
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Congratulations to PhD student Meixian (Vicky) Li on her acceptance to the upcoming Hanyang International Symposium on Phonetics and Cognitive Sciences of Language (HISPhonCog 2026) in Seoul!
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Prof. Chang is giving a plenary address at this week’s 5th International Conference on Heritage/Community Languages (ICHCL 5)! The title of his plenary is “Implications of heritage language sound systems for understanding perception–production links”. Prof. Ji Young Kim (UCLA) will be the discussant for this plenary.