The Effects of Mandarin Chinese Lexical Tones in Sound-Shape and Sound-Size Correspondences

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Abstract

Crossmodal correspondences refer to when specific domains of features in different sensory modalities are mapped. We investigated how vowels and lexical tones drive sound-shape (rounded or angular) and sound-size (large or small) mappings among native Mandarin Chinese speakers. We used three vowels (/i/, /u/, and /a/), and each vowel was articulated in four lexical tones. In the sound- shape matching, the tendency to match the rounded shape was decreased in the following order: /u/, /i/, and /a/. Tone 2 was more likely to be matched to the rounded pattern, whereas Tone 4 was more likely to be matched to the angular pattern. In the sound-size matching, /a/ was matched to the larger object more than /u/ and /i/, and Tone 2 and Tone 4 correspond to the large-small contrast. The results demonstrated that both vowels and tones play prominent roles in crossmodal correspondences, and sound-shape and sound-size mappings are heterogeneous phenomena.

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Chang, Y. H., Zhao, M., Chen, Y. C., & Huang, P. C. (2021). The Effects of Mandarin Chinese Lexical Tones in Sound-Shape and Sound-Size Correspondences. Multisensory Research, 35(3), 243–257. https://doi.org/10.1163/22134808-bja10068

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