TY - JOUR
T1 - Toddlers' word recognition in an unfamiliar regional accent : the role of local sentence context and prior accent exposure
AU - van Heugten, Marieke
AU - Johnson, Elizabeth K.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Adults are generally adept at recognizing familiar words in unfamiliar accents. However, studies testing young children's abilities to cope with accent-related variation in the speech signal have generated mixed results, with some work emphasizing toddlers' early competence and other work focusing more on their long-lasting difficulties in this domain. Here, we set out to unify these two perspectives and propose that task demands may play a crucial role in children's recognition of accented words. To this end, Canadian-English-learning 28-month-olds' looks to images on a screen were recorded while they were presented with a Scottish-accented speaker instructing them to find a depicted target object. To examine the effect of task demands, both local sentence context and prior accent exposure were manipulated. Overall, Canadian toddlers were found to recognize Scottish-accented words successfully, showing above-chance performance in the identification of words produced in an unfamiliar accent, even when target labels were presented in isolation. However, word recognition was considerably more robust when target words were presented in sentence context. Prior exposure to the unfamiliar Scottish accent in the laboratory did not modulate children's performance in this task. Taken together, these findings suggest that at least some task-related factors can affect children's recognition of accented words. Understanding unfamiliar accents, like understanding familiar accents, is thus not an isolated skill but, rather, is susceptible to contextual circumstances. Future models of spoken language processing in toddlerhood should incorporate these early effects of task demands.
AB - Adults are generally adept at recognizing familiar words in unfamiliar accents. However, studies testing young children's abilities to cope with accent-related variation in the speech signal have generated mixed results, with some work emphasizing toddlers' early competence and other work focusing more on their long-lasting difficulties in this domain. Here, we set out to unify these two perspectives and propose that task demands may play a crucial role in children's recognition of accented words. To this end, Canadian-English-learning 28-month-olds' looks to images on a screen were recorded while they were presented with a Scottish-accented speaker instructing them to find a depicted target object. To examine the effect of task demands, both local sentence context and prior accent exposure were manipulated. Overall, Canadian toddlers were found to recognize Scottish-accented words successfully, showing above-chance performance in the identification of words produced in an unfamiliar accent, even when target labels were presented in isolation. However, word recognition was considerably more robust when target words were presented in sentence context. Prior exposure to the unfamiliar Scottish accent in the laboratory did not modulate children's performance in this task. Taken together, these findings suggest that at least some task-related factors can affect children's recognition of accented words. Understanding unfamiliar accents, like understanding familiar accents, is thus not an isolated skill but, rather, is susceptible to contextual circumstances. Future models of spoken language processing in toddlerhood should incorporate these early effects of task demands.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:62382
U2 - 10.1177/0023830915600471
DO - 10.1177/0023830915600471
M3 - Article
SN - 0023-8309
VL - 59
SP - 353
EP - 363
JO - Language and Speech
JF - Language and Speech
IS - 3
ER -