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Proceedings Fonetik 2009 - Institutionen för lingvistik

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<strong>Proceedings</strong>, FOETIK <strong>2009</strong>, Dept. of Linguistics, Stockholm UniversityLanguage-specific speech perception as mismatchnegativity in 10-month-olds’ ERP dataIris-Corinna Schwarz 1 , Malin Forsén 2 , Linnea Johansson 2 , Catarina Lång 2 , Anna Narel 2 , TanyaValdés 2 , and Francisco Lacerda 11 Department of Linguistics, Stockholm University2 Department of Clinical Science, Intervention, and Technology, Speech Pathology Division,Karolinska Institutet, StockholmAbstractDiscrimination of native and nonnative speechcontrasts, the heart of the concept of languagespecificspeech perception, is sensitive to developmentalchange in speech perception duringinfancy. Using the mismatch negativityparadigm, seven Swedish language environment10-month-olds were tested on their perceptionof six different consonantal and tonalThai speech contrasts, native and nonnative tothe infants. Infant brain activation in responseto the speech contrasts was measured withevent-related potentials (ERPs). They showmismatch negativity at 300 ms, significant forcontrast change in the native condition, but notfor contrast change in the nonnative condition.Differences in native and nonnative speech discriminationare clearly reflected in the ERPsand confirm earlier findings obtained by behaviouraltechniques. ERP measurement thussuitably complements infant speech discriminationresearch.IntroductionSpeech perception bootstraps language acquisitionand forms the basis for later language development.During the first six months of life,infants are ‘citizens of the world’ (Kuhl, 2004)and perform well in both nonnative and nativespeech discrimination tasks (Burnham, Tyler, &Horlyck, 2002).For example, 6-month-old English andGerman infants tested on a German, but notEnglish contrast [dut]-[dyt], and an English, butnot German contrast [dɛt]-[dæt], discriminatedboth contrasts equally well (Polka & Bohn,1996). Around the age of six months, a perceptualshift occurs in favour of the native language,earlier for vowels than for consonants(Polka & Werker, 1994). Around that time infants’nonnative speech discrimination performancestarts to decline (Werker & Lalonde,1988), while they continue to build their nativelanguage skills (Kuhl, Williams, Lacerda, Stevens,& Lindblom, 1992). For example, 10- to12-month-old Canadian English environmentinfants could neither discriminate the nonnativeHindi contrast [ʈɑ]-[tɑ] nor the nonnativeThompson 1 contrast [ki]-[qi] whereas their 6- to8-month-old counterparts still could (Werker &Tees, 1984).This specialisation in the native languageholds around six months of age even on a supra-segmentallanguage level: American Englishlanguage environment infants younger thansix months are equally sensitive to all stresspatterns of words, and do not only prefer theones predominantly present in their native languageas infants older than six months do(Jusczyk, Cutler, & Redanz, 1993).During the first year of life, infants’ speechperception changes from language-general tolanguage-specific in several features. Adults arealready so specialised in their native languagethat their ability to discriminate nonnativespeech contrasts is greatly diminished and canonly partially be retrained (Tees & Werker,1984; Werker & Tees, 1999, 2002). By contrastingnative and nonnative discriminationperformance the degree of language-specificityin speech perception is shown and developmentalchange can be described (Burnham, 2003).In the presence of experience with the nativelanguage, language-specific speech perceptionrefines, whereas in the absence of experiencenonnative speech perception declines. Thisstudy focuses on 10-month-olds whose speechperception is language-specific.A common behavioural paradigm used totest discrimination abilities in infants youngerthan one year is the conditioned head-turnmethod (e.g., Polka, Colantonio, & Sundara,2001). This method requires the infant to beable to sit on the parent’s lap and to controlhead movement. Prior to the experimental test130

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