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Fine-grained variation in caregivers’ /s/ predicts their infants’ /s/ categorya
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102 |
Effects of the distribution of acoustic cues on infants' perception of sibilants
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103 |
Learning classes of sounds in infancy
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In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2011)
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Abstract:
Adults' phonotactic learning is affected by perceptual biases. One such bias concerns learning of constraints affecting groups of sounds: all else being equal, learning constraints affecting a natural class (a set of sounds sharing some phonetic characteristic) is easier than learning a constraint affecting an arbitrary set of sounds. This perceptual bias could be a given, for example, the result of innately guided learning; alternatively, it could be due to human learners’ experience with sounds. Using artificial grammars, we investigated whether such a bias arises in development, or whether it is present as soon as infants can learn phonotactics. Seven-month-old English-learning infants fail to generalize a phonotactic pattern involving fricatives and nasals, which does not form a coherent phonetic group, but succeed with the natural class of oral and nasal stops. In this paper, we report an experiment that explored whether those results also follow in a cohort of 4-month-olds. Unlike the older infants, 4-month-olds were able to generalize both groups, suggesting that the perceptual bias that makes phonotactic constraints on natural classes easier to learn is likely the effect of experience.
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URL: https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1169&context=pwpl https://repository.upenn.edu/pwpl/vol17/iss1/9
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104 |
Phonetic enhancement of sibilants in infant-directed speech
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Individual variation in infant speech processing: Implications for language acquisition theories
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In: Theses and Dissertations Available from ProQuest (2009)
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Why cross-linguistic frequency cannot be equated with ease of acquisition in phonology
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In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2008)
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