Is spoken Danish less intelligible than Swedish?

Title
Is spoken Danish less intelligible than Swedish?
Publication Date
2010
Author(s)
Gooskens, Charlotte
van Heuven, Vincent J
van Bezooijen, Renée
Pacilly, Jos J A
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Elsevier BV, North-Holland
Place of publication
Netherlands
DOI
10.1016/j.specom.2010.06.005
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/30123
Abstract
The most straightforward way to explain why Danes understand spoken Swedish relatively better than Swedes understand spoken Danish would be that spoken Danish is intrinsically a more difficult language to understand than spoken Swedish. We discuss circumstantial evidence suggesting that Danish is intrinsically poorly intelligible. We then report on a formal experiment in which we tested the intelligibility of Danish and Swedish materials spoken by three representative male speakers per language (isolated cognate and non-cognate words, words in semantically unpredictable sentences, words in spontaneous interaction in map tasks) presented in descending levels of noise to native listeners of Danish (N = 18) and Swedish (N = 24), respectively. The results show that Danish is as intelligible to Danish listeners as Swedish is to Swedish listeners. In a separate task, the same listeners recognized the same materials (presented without noise) in the neighboring language. The asymmetry that has traditionally been claimed was indeed found, even when differences in familiarity with the non-native language were controlled for. Possible reasons for the asymmetry are discussed.
Link
Citation
Speech Communication, 52(11-12), p. 1022-1037
ISSN
1872-7182
0167-6393
Start page
1022
End page
1037

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