Perception of tones by infants learning a non-tone language

Liquan Liu, René Kager

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

93 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This article examines the perception of tones by non-tone-language-learning (non-tone-learning) infants between 5 and 18. months in a study that reveals infants' initial sensitivity to tonal contrasts, deterioration yet plasticity of tonal sensitivity at the end of the first year, and a perceptual rebound in the second year. Dutch infants in five age groups were tested on their ability to discriminate a tonal contrast of Mandarin Chinese as well as a contracted tonal contrast. Infants are able to discriminate tonal contrasts at 5-6. months, and their tonal sensitivity deteriorates at around 9. months. However, the sensitivity rebound sat 17-18. months. Non-tone-learning infants' tonal perception is elastic, as is shown by the influence of acoustic salience and distributional learning: (1) a salient contrast may remain discriminable throughout infancy whereas a less salient one does not; (2) a bimodal distribution in tonal exposure increases non-tone-learning infants' discrimination ability during the trough in sensitivity to tonal contrasts at 11-12. months. These novel findings reveal non-tone-learning infants' U-shaped pattern in tone perception, and display their perceptual flexibility.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)385-394
Number of pages10
JournalCognition
Volume133
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Keywords

  • acoustics
  • infants
  • lexical phonology
  • speech perception

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