200 likes | 386 Views
Introduction:. This research explores the behaviour of monolingual Spanish and monolingual Catalan infants, in order to analyze their perception of native-sound contrasts.Because other research has been done on monosyllabic stimuli, this study used a more complex structure (CV1CV2). The vowel co
E N D
1. Bosch & Sebastián-Gallés Simultaneous Bilingualism and the Perception of a Language-Specific Vowel Contrast in the First Year of Life
2. Introduction: This research explores the behaviour of monolingual Spanish and monolingual Catalan infants, in order to analyze their perception of native-sound contrasts.
Because other research has been done on monosyllabic stimuli, this study used a more complex structure (CV1CV2).
The vowel contrast studied was /e/ and /e/.
3. Hypotheses Experiment 1:
All three subgroups would perceive the vowel contrast at 4 months of age.
Experiment 2:
However, at the age of 8 months, only the monolingual Catalan group should perceive the vowel contrast.
4. Experiment 1: Subjects:
36 infants of 4 months of age were recruited
3 groups of 12 infants:
Catalan monolinguals
Spanish monolinguals
Catalan-Spanish bilinguals
The experimenters were interested in the 2 monolingual groups.
5. Stimuli: The contrastive category that is studied is the Catalan vowel contrast /e/ and /e/ (two midfront vowels) in a CV1CV2 context.
In determining the infants’ discrimination capacities, the experimenters:
placed the vowel in the first stressed syllable of a pseudoword;
used several tokens from five different females (variability).
6. Stimuli (cont): Pseudowords [‘dV.?i] with V= /e/ and /e/.
18 tokens were recorded from 5 females (native speakers of Catalan and Spanish)
Motherese style
7. Stimuli: (cont) How were the stimuli chosen?
Acoustic perspective vs phonetic perspective
Formants of each token
8. Procedure Head-turn preference procedure
An image on the center monitor appears to capture the infant’s attention and to have him focused.
A speech stimulus is presented to the infant from either the left or right loudspeaker.
If there is a change in the speech stimulus, the infant will turn his head towards the stimulus.
If the child turns his head on the right side, a picture will appear on the monitor (reinforcement).
(source: http://www.psych.ubc.ca/~jwlabmgr/meth_cond.html)
9. Procedure (cont): familiarization phase
based on the infants’ looking behavior;
half of the infants were familiarized with [‘de?i], the other half with [‘de?i]
each infant had to accumulate 2 minutes of sustained attention
testing phase
listening of contrastive materials;
there is discrimination when there is differential attention time (greater listening time) between similar and novel materials;
the similar materials are the tokens presented in the familiarization phase.
10. Familiarization phase: Structure of a trial:
Two sets of 6 tokens from the same vowel category were presented to the infant.
Up to 6 trials of 25 seconds were needed to obtain a 2 minute sustained attention.
Group 1 Group 2
[‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i]
[‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i]
[‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i]
[‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i]
[‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i]
[‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i] [‘de?i]
x2 x2 x2 x2
11. Testing Phase: New tokens of the same category of vowels from the familiarization phase are presented to the infant;
Contrastive tokens are presented to both groups.
Infants react to those tokens by staring
12. Results Experiment 1: Mean attention time:
13. Results Experiment 1 Hypothesis confirmed:
An infant of 4 months can discriminate the vowel contrast of /e/ and /e/ within the first syllable of a disyllabic CVCV stimulus.
They can also normalize for talker and token variability.
This shows that at 4 months, the ambient language still has no effect on their ability to discriminate vowel contrasts.
14. Experiment 2 For the second experiment, Bosch and Sebastián-Gallés were interested in analyzing the impact that linguistic exposure would have on eight-month-old infants’ ability to perceive vowel contrasts.
15. Hypotheses:
Since these two categories are present only in Catalan, eight-month-old infants coming from Catalan-speaking families should discriminate them.
However, infants coming from Spanish-speaking families should not be able to perceive the contrast as easily since it is not present in their language.
16. Subjects & Stimuli: Subjects:
8 month old infants
3 groups participated in this experiment:
Catalan monolinguals
Spanish monolinguals
Catalan-Spanish bilinguals
Stimuli:
Same vowel contrasts (/e/ and /e/) from Experiment 1.
17. Results Experiment 2: Mean attention time
18. Results Experiment 2 (cont): The Catalan monolingual group, which is exposed to this vowel contrast in its linguistic environment, has no problem perceiving it.
On the other hand, eight-month-old infants from Spanish monolingual environment might only perceive the two vowels as being different ways of producing the same vowel.
19. Discussion: The results of both experiments confirm the following predictions :
At four months, babies from both Catalan monolinguial and Spanish monolingual environments can discriminate the Catalan vowel contrast /e/-/e/.
At eight months, only infants from the Catalan monolingual environment can perceive the contrast, showing that linguistic exposure might alter these language-general initial sensitivities.
20. Let’s Wrap it Up!!! The experiments have shown with different contrasts that at the age of 4 months, infants are universal listeners.
We can also see that around 8 months of age, infants start to lose the sensitivity to discriminate languages and they become more sensitive to the contrasts in their mother tongue.