Literature DB >> 14748448

Learning foreign vowels.

John Kingston1.   

Abstract

Two hypotheses have recently been put forward to account for listeners' ability to distinguish and learn contrasts between speech sounds in foreign languages. First, Best's Perceptual Assimilation Model and Flege's Speech Learning Model both predict that the ease with which a listener can tell one non-native phoneme from another varies directly with the extent to which these sounds assimilate to different native phonemes (Best, 1994; also Best, McRoberts, & Goodell, 2001; Flege, 1991). Second, Logan, Lively, & Pisoni (1991) have argued that training listeners to identify non-native phonemes teaches them sets of exemplars rather than more abstract distinctive feature values. I report here the results of three sets of experiments designed to test these hypotheses, in which American English listeners were trained to categorize German nonlow vowels. The first set of experiments show that some instances of the same contrast between German vowels are more easily discriminated than others, a result incompatible with the predictions of either Best's or Flege's models, but compatible with the alternative category recognition interpretation. The second set of experiments reveals effects of contextual and speaker variation on listeners' ability to learn [tense] but not [high] contrasts between foreign vowels, and are thus at least partly compatible with an exemplar model of foreign category learning (Pisoni, Lively, & Logan, 1994; also Nosofsky, 1986). The third set of experiments compares the predictions of Nosofsky's (1986) selective attention exemplar model of category learning with those of a feature learning model in tests of listeners' learning the natural classes to which the German vowels belong. The results are mixed: listeners learned the features that define the natural classes of [+/- high] and [+/- back] vowels, but could have learned either the feature that defines the natural classes of [+/- tense] vowels or sets of [+/- tense] exemplars. Natural classes defined by abstract distinctive feature values are thus learnable, even if their membership is phonetically polymorphous.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14748448     DOI: 10.1177/00238309030460020201

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lang Speech        ISSN: 0023-8309            Impact factor:   1.500


  6 in total

1.  Varying irrelevant phonetic features hinders learning of the feature being trained.

Authors:  Mark Antoniou; Patrick C M Wong
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 1.840

2.  Perceptual adaptation to non-native speech.

Authors:  Ann R Bradlow; Tessa Bent
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2007-05-29

3.  Learning a novel phonological contrast depends on interactions between individual differences and training paradigm design.

Authors:  Tyler K Perrachione; Jiyeon Lee; Louisa Y Y Ha; Patrick C M Wong
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 1.840

4.  A one-year longitudinal study of English and Japanese vowel production by Japanese adults and children in an English-speaking setting.

Authors:  Grace E Oh; Susan Guion-Anderson; Katsura Aoyama; James E Flege; Reiko Akahane-Yamada; Tsuneo Yamada
Journal:  J Phon       Date:  2011-04-01

5.  Category labels induce boundary-dependent perceptual warping in learned speech categories.

Authors:  Kristen Swan; Emily Myers
Journal:  Second Lang Res       Date:  2013-10-01

6.  Individual aptitude in Mandarin lexical tone perception predicts effectiveness of high-variability training.

Authors:  Makiko Sadakata; James M McQueen
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-11-25
  6 in total

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