This study explores the influence of bilingualism on the cognitive processing of language and music. Specifically, we investigate how infants learning a non-tone language perceive linguistic and musical pitch and how bilingualism affects cross-domain pitch perception. Dutch monolingual and bilingual infants of 8-9 months participated in the study. All infants had Dutch as one of the first languages. The other first languages, varying among bilingual families, were not tone or pitch accent languages. In two experiments, infants were tested on the discrimination of a lexical (N = 42) or a violin (N = 48) pitch contrast via a visual habituation paradigm. The two contrasts shared identical pitch contours but differed in timbre. Non-tone languag...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...
This study explores the influence of bilingualism on the cognitive processing of language and music....
Previous studies report incongruent findings whether bilingual infants face delays when perceiving n...
This paper examines the ability of bilingual infants who were learning Dutch and another non-tone la...
This case study investigates the role that bilingualism and/or music training plays on the pitch per...
Behavioural studies report differences in monolingual and bilingual infants’ non-native lexical tone...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...
Abstract Previous studies have reported perceptual advantages, such as when discriminating non...
Previous studies reported a non-native word learning advantage for bilingual infants at around 18 mo...
Previous studies reported a non-native word learning advantage for bilingual infants at around 18 mo...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Perceptual reorganization (PR) for tones occurs from 6 to 9 months in the first year of life. No pre...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...
This study explores the influence of bilingualism on the cognitive processing of language and music....
Previous studies report incongruent findings whether bilingual infants face delays when perceiving n...
This paper examines the ability of bilingual infants who were learning Dutch and another non-tone la...
This case study investigates the role that bilingualism and/or music training plays on the pitch per...
Behavioural studies report differences in monolingual and bilingual infants’ non-native lexical tone...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...
Abstract Previous studies have reported perceptual advantages, such as when discriminating non...
Previous studies reported a non-native word learning advantage for bilingual infants at around 18 mo...
Previous studies reported a non-native word learning advantage for bilingual infants at around 18 mo...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Perceptual reorganization (PR) for tones occurs from 6 to 9 months in the first year of life. No pre...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Purpose: Facing previous mixed findings between monolingual and bilingual infants’ phonetic developm...
Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lex...