Literature DB >> 29121588

Infants' sensitivity to vowel harmony and its role in segmenting speech.

Toben H Mintz1, Rachel L Walker2, Ashlee Welday3, Celeste Kidd2.   

Abstract

A critical part of infants' ability to acquire any language involves segmenting continuous speech input into discrete word forms. Certain properties of words could provide infants with reliable cues to word boundaries. Here we investigate the potential utility of vowel harmony (VH), a phonological property whereby vowels within a word systematically exhibit similarity ("harmony") for some aspect of the way they are pronounced. We present evidence that infants with no experience of VH in their native language nevertheless actively use these patterns to generate hypotheses about where words begin and end in the speech stream. In two sets of experiments, we exposed infants learning English, a language without VH, to a continuous speech stream in which the only systematic patterns available to be used as cues to word boundaries came from syllable sequences that showed VH or those that showed vowel disharmony (dissimilarity). After hearing less than one minute of the streams, infants showed evidence of sensitivity to VH cues. These results suggest that infants have an experience-independent sensitivity to VH, and are predisposed to segment speech according to harmony patterns. We also found that when the VH patterns were more subtle (Experiment 2), infants required more exposure to the speech stream before they segmented based on VH, consistent with previous work on infants' preferences relating to processing load. Our findings evidence a previously unknown mechanism by which infants could discover the words of their language, and they shed light on the perceptual mechanisms that might be responsible for the emergence of vowel harmony as an organizing principle for the sound structure of words in many languages.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Infants; Language acquisition; Learning biases; Speech processing; Vowel harmony; Word segmentation

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29121588      PMCID: PMC5818326          DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.10.020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  15 in total

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9.  Can infants map meaning to newly segmented words? Statistical segmentation and word learning.

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10.  The Goldilocks effect: human infants allocate attention to visual sequences that are neither too simple nor too complex.

Authors:  Celeste Kidd; Steven T Piantadosi; Richard N Aslin
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