LINGUIST List 17.2410
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Mon Aug 28 2006
Diss: Lang Acquisition/Phonetics: Narayan: 'Acoustic-Perceptual Sal...'
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Directory
1. Chandan
Narayan,
Dissertation AbstractAcoustic-Perceptual Salience and Developmental Speech Perception
Message 1: Dissertation AbstractAcoustic-Perceptual Salience and Developmental Speech Perception
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Date: 27-Aug-2006
From: Chandan Narayan <cnarayan umich.edu>
Subject: Dissertation AbstractAcoustic-Perceptual Salience and Developmental Speech Perception
Institution: University of Michigan
Program: Department of Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2006
Author: Chandan Narayan
Dissertation Title: Acoustic-Perceptual Salience and Developmental Speech Perception
Linguistic Field(s):
Language Acquisition
Phonetics
Subject Language(s): Filipino (fil)
Dissertation Director:
Patrice Speeter Beddor
Susan Gelman
Marilyn Shatz
Janet F. Werker
Dissertation Abstract:
Inspired by the notion that some typologically less common contrasts may be perceptually less salient than ubiquitous contrasts, this dissertation investigates the perception, by infants and adults, of a relatively uncommon nasal place contrast (onset /na-ŋa/) against a more common nasal contrast (/ma-na/) in order to assess the role of acoustic-perceptual salience in the development of speech perception. Do perceptually less salient contrasts show a pattern of development different from the well-known tendency for infants to successfully discriminate native and non-native contrasts in young infancy? It is argued that phonetic contrasts that are perceptually less salient than others may require language experience to be discriminated in infancy. An acoustic analysis (Experiment 1) of onset /m n ŋ/ in Filipino showed that, in the perceptually relevant F2xF3 space, [na] was closer to [ŋa] than to [ma]. When presented with these same stimuli in a discrimination task (Experiment 2), English- and Filipino-speaking adults accurately discriminated [ma]-[na], native to both language groups. The [na]-[ŋa] contrast, native to Filipino but not English speakers, was discriminated at chance level by the English listeners and was well discriminated by the Filipino listeners, although slightly but significantly less accurately than [ma]-[na]. When Filipino listeners were presented with the same contrasts in two noisy listening conditions (Experiment 7), discrimination of [na]-[ŋa] fell to near chance levels in the noisier condition (-5dB SNR), while accuracy on [ma]-[na] remained above 90% in both noisy conditions. These findings suggest that the [ma]-[na] contrast is perceptually more salient than [na]-[ŋa] for adult listeners regardless of language experience. When English-hearing infants, aged 4-12 months, were presented with the two Filipino contrasts (Experiments 3-5), they successfully discriminated the [ma]-[na] contrast but not [na]-[ŋa]. In Experiment 6, Filipino-hearing infants successfully discriminated native [na]-[ŋa] at 10-12 months, but not at 6-8 months. Taken together, the results suggest that acoustic-perceptual salience affects the discrimination of nasal place contrasts in infancy, with the less salient [na]-[ŋa] contrast being more difficult to discriminate in infancy than more salient [ma]-[na]. Native language experience is required for the infant to perceptually segregate acoustically similar categories.
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