The Discrimination of Vowels and Consonants by Lara Lalonde, Jacynthe Bigras, Jessica Flanagan,...

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The Discrimination of Vowels and Consonants by Lara Lalonde, Jacynthe Bigras, Jessica Flanagan, Véronick Boucher, Janie Paris & Lyzanne Cuddihy

Transcript of The Discrimination of Vowels and Consonants by Lara Lalonde, Jacynthe Bigras, Jessica Flanagan,...

Page 1: The Discrimination of Vowels and Consonants by Lara Lalonde, Jacynthe Bigras, Jessica Flanagan, Véronick Boucher, Janie Paris & Lyzanne Cuddihy.

The Discrimination of Vowels and Consonants

by Lara Lalonde, Jacynthe Bigras, Jessica Flanagan, Véronick Boucher, Janie Paris & Lyzanne Cuddihy

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Based on 2 articles

The Discrimination of Foreign Speech Contrasts by Infants and Adults– By Sandra E. Trehub, 1976

Simultaneous Bilingualism and the Perception of a Language-Specific Vowel Contrast in the First Year of Life– By Laura Bosch and Núria Sebastián-Gallés,

2003

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Previous Research

Very young infants are better able to perceive phonetic distinction than adults.

By the end of the first year of life, infants’ responsiveness to many non-native contrast will be significantly reduced. (Aslin, Pisoni, & Jusczyk 1993 and Jusczyck 1997)

Only a few studies have described developmental changes in vowel perception.

– Language specific effects seem to be present earlier for vowels than consonants, at around 6 to 8 months of age.

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Previous Research (cont):

Polka and Werker (1994) found that 4 month old infants can discriminate a pair of foreign vowel in a /dVt/ context. At 6 to 8 months of age, this pattern was already modified and by 10 to 12 months of age, infants were no longer able to discriminate foreign vowels.

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Trehub’s ArticleIntroduction:

This study looks at how infants between 5-17 weeks of age could discriminate foreign language contrasts.

Trehub conducted 2 experiments to evaluate this phenomenon in infants.– She observed the nasal vowel distinction [pa] vs

[pã] and the distinctive feature of stridency [a] vs [a].

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Subjects:

Residents of Montreal, Canada

English as a home language.

40, full-term, healthy infants– 20 in experiment 1 (~ 10.5 weeks old)– 20 in experiment 2 (~ 9.5 weeks old)

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Stimuli:

Experiment 1 used stimuli [pa] vs [pã] from the French and Polish languages.– ~500 ms in duration

Experiment 2 used stimuli [a] vs [a] used by Czech speakers. (feature of stridency)– ~500 ms in duration

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Apparatus

Nonnutritive sucking was attached to a pressure transducer which transcribed the results on a polygraph.

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Procedure:

[pa] or [a] was presented to both experimental and control groups in the habituation phase.

decrement criterion: decreased sucking rate at least 33 1/3 % below the infant's highest rate, maintained for 2 consecutive minutes.

when the decrement criterion was reached, the contrast stimulus was substituted for the experimental group only: [pã] or [a].

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Results

Consisted of criterion sucks per minute

No significant differences in the predecrement period (before switch) for both the experimental and control group.

Significant differences in postdecrement period (after switch).

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Discussion

Infants are able to discriminate between pairs of foreign language contrasts that they have never heard before.

Even if the nasal vowel [ã] and the strident consonant [] are said to be among the latest productive acquisitions for speakers of relevant languages, infants aged between 5-17 weeks old can discriminate them.