7: Auditory Perception and language development Flashcards

1
Q

how do we study auditory perception

A
  • conditioned head turn paradigm

- central fixation preference procedure

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2
Q

conditioned head turn paradigm

A

-used to test whether infants discriminate two sound categories (“ba” and “da”)

-Conditioning (training) phase:
Start with sounds the infant can definitely discriminate
Infants trained to turn head to side when sound changes

  1. Test Phase: Once infants conditioned to turn head when hear sound change, test infants on sounds of interest (e.g., language sounds ba vs. da)
    - infants who perceive sound change = turn head
    - infants who CANNOT perceive sound change = dont turn head
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3
Q

central fixation preference procedure

A
  • Infants integrate auditory and visual stimuli
  • Infants look at visual stimulus in front of them (e.g., moving shapes)
  • While infants looking at screen, auditory stimuli are playing
  • Infants are habituated to the auditory stimuli (e.g., “ba”), and look away from the screen
  • after habituation, play a new sound “da”
  • if infants hear difference, they will renew interest in the visual stimulus
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4
Q

changes in Phoneme perception

A
  • Adults can only discriminate the phonetic contrasts of their native language.
  • adult Japanese speakers can’t discriminate /l/ and /r/ phonemes in the English language
  • adult English speakers can’t discriminate a Hindi distinction: the dental /d/ vs. the retroflex /d/

Human infants are born being able to discriminate all phonetic contrasts (from all human languages), even ones which their (native) language does not make.

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5
Q

perceptual narrowing

A

-

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6
Q

werker

A
  • Infants quickly lose the ability to distinguish between sounds they haven’t experienced
  • hindi
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7
Q

Kuhl Tsao & Liu

A
  • Infants are exposed to the sounds of their native language
  • sound units (phonemes) that make up one language can be different from the sounds that makes up other languages
  • In a Mandarin-speaking environment, infants’ ability to perceptually discriminate /r/ from /l/ diminishes between 6 and 12 months (perceptual narrowing)
  • If these infants are exposed to repeated interactions with an English speaker prior to 12 months, the ability to perceptually discriminate /r/ from /l/ is preserved
  • Similar exposure to voice-recordings of English speaker do not yield the same preservation in perceptual discrimination
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8
Q

auditory perception and language

A
  • The ability to perceive differences in the small sound units of speech lays a foundation for learning to produce and comprehend language
  • The sound units (phonemes) we experience most frequently (i.e., from our native language) determine which languages we can speak and comprehend
  • perception of small units of speech —-> comprehension & production of language
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9
Q

saffran, Aslin, & Newport

A
  • Play infants a constant stream of sounds, with no auditory cues for how the sounds should be parsed (e.g., no breaks in the sounds—just constant stream of speech
  • The ONLY thing that is a cue for parsing the sound stream into words is the statistical regularity of syllable co-occurrence
  • Some sound combinations occur with much higher probability than others!
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10
Q

Saffran, Aslin & Newport study

A

-Infants habituated to acoustic stream

-Then infants hear words (high probability combinations)
moku, gapi

  • Or infants hear part-words (low probability combinations
  • babies are habituated to high probability combos
  • babies look to low probability combos
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11
Q

statistical word segmentation

A

: syllables that co-occur consistently tend to form words

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12
Q

acoustic variation and statistical word segmentation

A

Requires recognizing repetitions of syllables in consistent vs. inconsistent pairings, across different pitches, voices, speaking rates, emotional tones

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