Topic 10: Early Speech Perception Flashcards
What is developmental psycholinguistics?
The study of the underlying cognitive processes involved in word learning and language acquisition.
What are phonemes and prosody?
Phonemes – smallest unit of sound that is meaningful in native language
Prosody - speech qualities (irony, mood), rhythm and rate of syllables
At what age is the auditory system functional? and how is this measured
Around 24 weeks foetus will respond to auditory stimulation measured by increase in heartrate or shift of position.
What is the auditory environment like inside the womb?
▪ noisy environment
▪ external sounds are ‘muffled’
▪ lower frequency of speech
▪ maternal voice is loud, salient – but unintelligible & dissimilar to ‘outside’
* cannot detect phonemes but rather the prosody of language
What tools/ methods are used in fetal research?
fetal ultrasound or electrocardiogram (prone to distortion) Or, fetal magnetocardiography – relies on magnetic field and is more precise
Study on fetal familiarity of mother’s use of native language (Minai et al, 2017)
Using magnetocardiography
they measured the consistency of fetal heartrate when reading a passage in english-english or english- japanese. Results show less consistency when novel language is spoken, suggesting familiarity to native language.
What are neonates?
A newborn child (less than 4 weeks old)
How can we measure preferences in neonates?
By monitoring rates of non-nutritive sucking or by assessing them using the headturn preference procedure.
What auditory preferences have neonates shown to have through non nutritive sucking research?
Human voice > synthetic sounds
maternal voice > male voice
maternal language > non native
De Caspar & Spence (1986) Dr. Suess trans natal learning.
In later stages of pregnancy mothers read a Dr.Suess book consistenly aloud. After birth neonates showed preference for familiar Dr, Suess passage suggesting they were learning the rhythm of language in utero.
What is perceptual learning?
long-lasting changes in (auditory) perception that arise from experience or practice. e.g. discrimination between speech sounds of different languages.
Study on neonatal discimination between different languages.(Nazzi et al., 1998)
French neonates non-nutritive sucking rates were measured in response to non native langauge being spoken. Initially higher sucking rates for english, then initially higher rates for japanese but not dutch. Dutch and english have similar timing properties whereas japanese has a different rhythmic structure. So by 2 mths infants are able to discriminate between langauges.
How do infants segment speech and find the
fundamental units in speech streams?
Categorical Perception: a perceptual phenomenon whereby events (e.g., sounds, colours) that lie along a continuum are perceived as belonging to one category or another.
So infants categorise phonemes into groups that help them to understand words and sentences.
How do we have stable categories of speech sounds? e.g. pa-ba
speech sounds are on a physical continuum, most of us place the phoneme ‘boundary’ around the same place on this continuum
Study of infants ability to extract perceptual categories from speech sounds (Eimas et al. 1972)
1-4mths old infants given continuous speech stream (ba-ba-ba) that merges into another syllable (da). Non-nutritive sucking rate increased much more when new syllable introduced compared to control group. Suggests infants can discriminate across phoneme boundaries.