Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prior to acquiring a large receptive vocabulary, implying a major role for unsupervised distributional learning strategies in phoneme acquisition in the first year of life. Multiple sources of between-speaker variability contribute to children’s language input and thus complicate the problem of distributional learning. Adults resolve this type of indexical variability by adjusting their speech processing for individual speakers. For infants to handle indexical variation in the same way, they must be sensitive to both linguistic and indexical cues. To assess infants’ sensitivity to and relative weighting of indexical and linguistic cues, we famili...
An important mechanism for learning speech sounds in the first year of life is ‘distributional learn...
The acoustic variation in language presents learners with a substantial challenge. To learn by track...
Within the first few years of life, children acquire many of the building blocks of their native lan...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
Infants preferentially discriminate native speechsound categories prior to acquiring a large recepti...
Phonetic perception becomes native-like by 10 months of age. A potential mechanism of change, distri...
Six-month-old infants are known to categorize vowels despite variation in talker voice and pitch con...
To what extent does language acquisition recruit domain-general processing mechanisms? In this disse...
There is a substantial literature describing how infants become more sensitive to differences betwee...
Infants under six months are able to discriminate native and non-native con-sonant contrasts equally...
To learn speech‐sound categories, infants must identify the acoustic dimensions that differentiate c...
Previous research on speech perception in both adults and infants has supported the view that conson...
Phoneme acquisition comes with challenges, as infants are faced with enormous acoustic variability a...
Infants successfully discriminate speech sound contrasts that belong to their native language’s phon...
An important mechanism for learning speech sounds in the first year of life is ‘distributional learn...
The acoustic variation in language presents learners with a substantial challenge. To learn by track...
Within the first few years of life, children acquire many of the building blocks of their native lan...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
Infants preferentially discriminate between speech tokens that cross native category boundaries prio...
Infants preferentially discriminate native speechsound categories prior to acquiring a large recepti...
Phonetic perception becomes native-like by 10 months of age. A potential mechanism of change, distri...
Six-month-old infants are known to categorize vowels despite variation in talker voice and pitch con...
To what extent does language acquisition recruit domain-general processing mechanisms? In this disse...
There is a substantial literature describing how infants become more sensitive to differences betwee...
Infants under six months are able to discriminate native and non-native con-sonant contrasts equally...
To learn speech‐sound categories, infants must identify the acoustic dimensions that differentiate c...
Previous research on speech perception in both adults and infants has supported the view that conson...
Phoneme acquisition comes with challenges, as infants are faced with enormous acoustic variability a...
Infants successfully discriminate speech sound contrasts that belong to their native language’s phon...
An important mechanism for learning speech sounds in the first year of life is ‘distributional learn...
The acoustic variation in language presents learners with a substantial challenge. To learn by track...
Within the first few years of life, children acquire many of the building blocks of their native lan...