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Joan K.-Y. Ma

Researcher at University of Hong Kong

Publications -  17
Citations -  227

Joan K.-Y. Ma is an academic researcher from University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dysarthria & Intonation (linguistics). The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 15 publications receiving 196 citations. Previous affiliations of Joan K.-Y. Ma include Dresden University of Technology & Queen Margaret University.

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Effect of intonation on cantonese lexical tones.

TL;DR: The results suggest that although the intonation context provided cues for correct tone identification, the int onation-induced changes in FO contour cannot always be perceptually compensated for, resulting in some erroneous perception of the identity of Cantonese tone.
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Intonation contrast in Cantonese speakers with hypokinetic dysarthria associated with Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: Intonation contrasts produced by speakers with Parkinson's disease contribute to the researchers' understanding of intonation marking in speakers with PD, with specific application to the production and perception of int onation in a lexical tone language.
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Perceptual characteristics of Cantonese hypokinetic dysarthria

TL;DR: The perceptual profile of Cantonese hypokinetic dysarthria was largely similar to profiles for English and Japanese speakers; notable differences are discussed.
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The perception of intonation questions and statements in Cantonese

TL;DR: The present study investigates the acoustic cues associated with the perception of sentences as questions or statements in Cantonese, as a function of the lexical tone in sentence final position, and suggests that the use of F0 cues for the Perception of intonation question in tonal languages is likely to be language-specific.
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Speech Prosody Across Stimulus Types for Individuals with Parkinson's Disease

TL;DR: The prosodic profile of PD speakers was different from that of the control speakers in the more structured task, and lower intelligibility was found in less structured task which highlighted the value of both structured and natural stimulus to evaluate speech production in PD speakers.