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Individual differences in perceptual adaptability of foreign sound categories

Authors
Schertz, JessamynCho, TaehongLotto, AndrewWarner, Natasha
Issue Date
Jan-2016
Publisher
Psychonomic Society Inc.
Keywords
Categorization; L2 speech perception; Perceptual learning; Psycholinguistics
Citation
Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, v.78, no.1, pp 355 - 367
Pages
13
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
Volume
78
Number
1
Start Page
355
End Page
367
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/155376
DOI
10.3758/s13414-015-0987-1
ISSN
1943-3921
1943-393X
Abstract
Listeners possess a remarkable ability to adapt to acoustic variability in the realization of speech sound categories (e.g., different accents). The current work tests whether non-native listeners adapt their use of acoustic cues in phonetic categorization when they are confronted with changes in the distribution of cues in the input, as native listeners do, and examines to what extent these adaptation patterns are influenced by individual cue-weighting strategies. In line with previous work, native English listeners, who use voice onset time (VOT) as a primary cue to the stop voicing contrast (e.g., 'pa' vs. 'ba'), adjusted their use of f0 (a secondary cue to the contrast) when confronted with a noncanonical "accent" in which the two cues gave conflicting information about category membership. Native Korean listeners' adaptation strategies, while variable, were predictable based on their initial cue weighting strategies. In particular, listeners who used f0 as the primary cue to category membership adjusted their use of VOT (their secondary cue) in response to the noncanonical accent, mirroring the native pattern of "downweighting" a secondary cue. Results suggest that non-native listeners show native-like sensitivity to distributional information in the input and use this information to adjust categorization, just as native listeners do, with the specific trajectory of category adaptation governed by initial cue-weighting strategies.
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COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES (DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE)
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