Kuhl, P. K., Williams, K. A., Lacerda, F., Stevens, K. N., & Lindblom, B. (1992) Linguistic experience alters phonetic perception in infants by 6 months of age. Science, 255, 606-608. • • All vowel sounds largely characterized by relative frequencies of F1 & F2 Different languages have different sets of vowel sounds – They carve up F1/F2 "space" differently • F1/F2 "space" with some English vowel variants 09/01/10 Kuhl et al. (1992) Presentation Magnet Effect • Adult speakers of a language agree quite well about best examples of vowels in their language are – i.e., they agree on prototypical vowels for the language • Adults show a magnet effect around prototypical vowels in their language – Similar to categorical perception for consonants, but less extreme – Give adults pairs of vowel sounds & ask them to rate how similar they sound • • • • Sometimes one member of the pair is a prototypical vowel from their language Sometimes neither sound is a prototype Degree of physical difference sometimes small, sometimes large For equivalent size physical difference, people judge sounds near a prototype as more similar to it than sounds near a non-prototype • Prototypes in F1/F2 space act like "magnets“ • Given variability in speech (due to both co-articulation and error), this "tuning" probably allows us to ignore unimportant variations as long as they're close enough 09/01/10 Kuhl et al. (1992) Presentation How early in life does this "tuning" for specific languages happen? • Use habituation paradigms to test what infants can discriminate – sucking rate, heart rate, head-turning – play an auditory stimulus repeatedly and then change it and observe behavior – training phase: • make large change in stimulus & present visual display child likes at same time to 1 side • child begins to anticipate visual display whenever sound changes, so now only turn on display after they've turned their head - the display is a reward for turning – test phase: • change stimuli by differing amounts, & use head-turning as indication of whether child noticed change • head-turn is analogous to adults' similarity ratings • Evidence from these paradigms that categorical perception for consonants becomes adult-like by about 1 year of age (Werker & Tees, 1984) – Hypothesized that this is because infants typically start to produce single words at 8 to 12 months, & that starting to use sounds meaningfully is what gives rise to the tuning effect 09/01/10 Kuhl et al. (1992) Presentation Study • • • 32 American & 32 Swedish 6-month-old infants tested – in US and Sweden in monolingual families Head-turning habituation paradigm Vowel sounds were English /i/ & Swedish /y/ – English doesn't have /y/ & Swedish doesn't have /i/, so there's 1 sound that's a prototype for each language and 1 that isn't - Stimuli were synthesized vowel sounds varying in distance from prototype (& non-prototype) 09/01/10 Kuhl et al. (1992) Presentation Results • Infants showed "magnet effect" for their prototype but not for the other vowel – American infants "didn't notice" the change in vowel sound (i.e., they didn't turn): • 67% of the time when it was near /i/ • 51% of the time when it was near /y/ – Swedish infants "didn't notice" the change: • 56% of the time when it was near /i/ • 66% of the time when it was near /y/ • Infants "hear vowels close to prototype for their language as sounding like prototype" • This is already developing by 6 months of age • Thus, it's not dependent on beginning to speak, but simply on experience hearing the language 09/01/10 Kuhl et al. (1992) Presentation
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