As a result of complex international migration patterns, listeners in large urban centres such as London, UK, likely encounter large amounts of variation in spoken language. However, although dealing with variation is crucial to communication, relatively little is known about how the ability to do this develops. Still less is known about how this might be affected by language background. The current study investigates whether early experience with variation, specifically growing up bilingually in London, affects accent categorization. Sixty children (30 monolingual, 30 bilingual) aged 5–7 years, were tested in their ability to comprehend and categorize talkers in 2 out of 3 accents: a home, unfamiliar regional and unfamiliar foreign-accente...
Previous research on accentedness in simultaneous bilinguals has produced inconsistent results and h...
This study reports on an experiment with twenty pre-school children (3;1–4;7) in York, UK to investi...
A prevalent view in monolingual first language acquisition is that children acquire their native lan...
As a result of complex international migration patterns, listeners in large urban centres such as Lo...
Phonetic variation is inherent in natural speech. It can be lexically relevant, differentiating word...
Adult processing of other-accented speech is fast, dependent on lexical access, and readily generali...
This study examines children's metaphonological awareness for accent-related information in connecte...
It is common in many parts of the world for children to grow up in linguistically diverse communitie...
Although studies investigating language abilities in young children exposed to more than one languag...
Many schools in Western countries like the United Kingdom have become increasingly diverse communiti...
This study explores the hypothesis that children identified as having phonological processing proble...
This study examines children's ability to detect accent-related information in connected speech. Bri...
The recognition of familiar words was evaluated in 20-month-old children raised in a rhotic accent e...
Growing up in a linguistically diverse language environment and/or a multilingual family shapes lang...
Language and accent strongly influence the formation of social groups. By five years of age, childre...
Previous research on accentedness in simultaneous bilinguals has produced inconsistent results and h...
This study reports on an experiment with twenty pre-school children (3;1–4;7) in York, UK to investi...
A prevalent view in monolingual first language acquisition is that children acquire their native lan...
As a result of complex international migration patterns, listeners in large urban centres such as Lo...
Phonetic variation is inherent in natural speech. It can be lexically relevant, differentiating word...
Adult processing of other-accented speech is fast, dependent on lexical access, and readily generali...
This study examines children's metaphonological awareness for accent-related information in connecte...
It is common in many parts of the world for children to grow up in linguistically diverse communitie...
Although studies investigating language abilities in young children exposed to more than one languag...
Many schools in Western countries like the United Kingdom have become increasingly diverse communiti...
This study explores the hypothesis that children identified as having phonological processing proble...
This study examines children's ability to detect accent-related information in connected speech. Bri...
The recognition of familiar words was evaluated in 20-month-old children raised in a rhotic accent e...
Growing up in a linguistically diverse language environment and/or a multilingual family shapes lang...
Language and accent strongly influence the formation of social groups. By five years of age, childre...
Previous research on accentedness in simultaneous bilinguals has produced inconsistent results and h...
This study reports on an experiment with twenty pre-school children (3;1–4;7) in York, UK to investi...
A prevalent view in monolingual first language acquisition is that children acquire their native lan...