Infants under six months are able to discriminate native and non-native con-sonant contrasts equally well, but as they learn the phonological systems of their native language, this ability declines. Current explanations of this phenomenon agree that the decline in discrimination ability is linked to the formation of native-language phonemic categories. The goal of this study was to evaluate the role of input statistics in learning these categories: our hypothesis was that relative frequency is a determinant of the relative order in which categories are acquired. English-learning infants of two age groups (6.5 months and 8.5 months) were tested on their ability to discriminate non-native consonant contrasts using the Conditioned Head Turn Pr...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
This dissertation investigates the development of speech sound categories in infants with (FR) and w...
Previous studies show that infants experience perceptual reorganization (PR) in the first year of li...
Previous research has revealed that very young infants discriminate most speech contrasts with whic...
To learn speech‐sound categories, infants must identify the acoustic dimensions that differentiate c...
It is generally accepted that infants initially discriminate native and non-native contrasts and tha...
Previous research has indicated that infants have the ability to categorically discriminate many of ...
There is a substantial literature describing how infants become more sensitive to differences betwee...
Previous work in which we compared English infants, English adults, and Hindi adults on their abilit...
A visual fixation study tested whether 7-month-olds can discriminate between different talkers. The ...
Numerous findings suggest that non-native speech perception undergoes dramatic changes before the in...
Infants’ perception of speech sound contrasts is modulated by their language environment, for exampl...
A current theoretical view proposes that infants converge on the speech categories of their native l...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
Infants' perception of speech sound contrasts is modulated by their language environment, for exampl...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
This dissertation investigates the development of speech sound categories in infants with (FR) and w...
Previous studies show that infants experience perceptual reorganization (PR) in the first year of li...
Previous research has revealed that very young infants discriminate most speech contrasts with whic...
To learn speech‐sound categories, infants must identify the acoustic dimensions that differentiate c...
It is generally accepted that infants initially discriminate native and non-native contrasts and tha...
Previous research has indicated that infants have the ability to categorically discriminate many of ...
There is a substantial literature describing how infants become more sensitive to differences betwee...
Previous work in which we compared English infants, English adults, and Hindi adults on their abilit...
A visual fixation study tested whether 7-month-olds can discriminate between different talkers. The ...
Numerous findings suggest that non-native speech perception undergoes dramatic changes before the in...
Infants’ perception of speech sound contrasts is modulated by their language environment, for exampl...
A current theoretical view proposes that infants converge on the speech categories of their native l...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
Infants' perception of speech sound contrasts is modulated by their language environment, for exampl...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
This dissertation investigates the development of speech sound categories in infants with (FR) and w...
Previous studies show that infants experience perceptual reorganization (PR) in the first year of li...