Literature DB >> 20573342

Word segmentation with universal prosodic cues.

Ansgar D Endress1, Marc D Hauser.   

Abstract

When listening to speech from one's native language, words seem to be well separated from one another, like beads on a string. When listening to a foreign language, in contrast, words seem almost impossible to extract, as if there was only one bead on the same string. This contrast reveals that there are language-specific cues to segmentation. The puzzle, however, is that infants must be endowed with a language-independent mechanism for segmentation, as they ultimately solve the segmentation problem for any native language. Here, we approach the acquisition problem by asking whether there are language-independent cues to segmentation that might be available to even adult learners who have already acquired a native language. We show that adult learners recognize words in connected speech when only prosodic cues to word-boundaries are given from languages unfamiliar to the participants. In both artificial and natural speech, adult English speakers, with no prior exposure to the test languages, readily recognized words in natural languages with critically different prosodic patterns, including French, Turkish and Hungarian. We suggest that, even though languages differ in their sound structures, they carry universal prosodic characteristics. Further, these language-invariant prosodic cues provide a universally accessible mechanism for finding words in connected speech. These cues may enable infants to start acquiring words in any language even before they are fine-tuned to the sound structure of their native language.
Copyright © 2010. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20573342     DOI: 10.1016/j.cogpsych.2010.05.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Psychol        ISSN: 0010-0285            Impact factor:   3.468


  14 in total

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4.  Listening through voices: Infant statistical word segmentation across multiple speakers.

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Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2015-09-21

5.  Visual speech segmentation: using facial cues to locate word boundaries in continuous speech.

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Journal:  Lang Cogn Process       Date:  2014

6.  Targets for a comparative neurobiology of language.

Authors:  Justin T Kiggins; Jordan A Comins; Timothy Q Gentner
Journal:  Front Evol Neurosci       Date:  2012-04-09

7.  When forgetting fosters learning: A neural network model for statistical learning.

Authors:  Ansgar D Endress; Scott P Johnson
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2021-02-17

8.  Prosodic cues enhance rule learning by changing speech segmentation mechanisms.

Authors:  Ruth de Diego-Balaguer; Antoni Rodríguez-Fornells; Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-09-30

9.  Domain-general mechanisms for speech segmentation: The role of duration information in language learning.

Authors:  Rebecca L A Frost; Padraic Monaghan; Tomoko Tatsumi
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 3.332

10.  The edge factor in early word segmentation: utterance-level prosody enables word form extraction by 6-month-olds.

Authors:  Elizabeth K Johnson; Amanda Seidl; Michael D Tyler
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 3.240

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