Literature DB >> 36095175

Naturalistic speech supports distributional learning across contexts.

Kasia Hitczenko1, Naomi H Feldman2,3.   

Abstract

At birth, infants discriminate most of the sounds of the world's languages, but by age 1, infants become language-specific listeners. This has generally been taken as evidence that infants have learned which acoustic dimensions are contrastive, or useful for distinguishing among the sounds of their language(s), and have begun focusing primarily on those dimensions when perceiving speech. However, speech is highly variable, with different sounds overlapping substantially in their acoustics, and after decades of research, we still do not know what aspects of the speech signal allow infants to differentiate contrastive from noncontrastive dimensions. Here we show that infants could learn which acoustic dimensions of their language are contrastive, despite the high acoustic variability. Our account is based on the cross-linguistic fact that even sounds that overlap in their acoustics differ in the contexts they occur in. We predict that this should leave a signal that infants can pick up on and show that acoustic distributions indeed vary more by context along contrastive dimensions compared with noncontrastive dimensions. By establishing this difference, we provide a potential answer to how infants learn about sound contrasts, a question whose answer in natural learning environments has remained elusive.

Entities:  

Keywords:  distributional learning; language acquisition; phonetic learning

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 36095175      PMCID: PMC9499502          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2123230119

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   12.779


  48 in total

1.  The beginnings of word segmentation in english-learning infants.

Authors:  P W Jusczyk; D M Houston; M Newsome
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  1999 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.468

2.  Perception of Prosodic Boundary Correlates by Newborn Infants.

Authors:  Anne Christophe; Jacques Mehler; Núria Sebastián-Gallés
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2001-07-01

3.  The interaction between acoustic salience and language experience in developmental speech perception: evidence from nasal place discrimination.

Authors:  Chandan R Narayan; Janet F Werker; Patrice Speeter Beddor
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2010-05

4.  Infant word segmentation revisited: edge alignment facilitates target extraction.

Authors:  Amanda Seidl; Elizabeth K Johnson
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2006-11

5.  Learning phonology from surface distributions, considering Dutch and English vowel duration.

Authors:  Daniel Swingley
Journal:  Lang Learn Dev       Date:  2019-02-14

6.  A role for the developing lexicon in phonetic category acquisition.

Authors:  Naomi H Feldman; Thomas L Griffiths; Sharon Goldwater; James L Morgan
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 8.934

7.  Word-level information influences phonetic learning in adults and infants.

Authors:  Naomi H Feldman; Emily B Myers; Katherine S White; Thomas L Griffiths; James L Morgan
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2013-04-02

8.  Can infants learn phonology in the lab? A meta-analytic answer.

Authors:  Alejandrina Cristia
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2017-11-05

9.  Developmental aspects of cross-language speech perception.

Authors:  J F Werker; J H Gilbert; K Humphrey; R C Tees
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1981-03

10.  Do Infants Really Learn Phonetic Categories?

Authors:  Naomi H Feldman; Sharon Goldwater; Emmanuel Dupoux; Thomas Schatz
Journal:  Open Mind (Camb)       Date:  2021-11-01
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