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Development of Phonological Constancy: Toddlers' Perception of Native- and Jamaican-Accented Words
Authors:Catherine T. Best  Michael D. Tyler  Tiffany N. Gooding  Corey B. Orlando   Chelsea A. Quann
Affiliation:MARCS Auditory Laboratories, University of Western Sydney;;Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, Connecticut;and;Wesleyan University
Abstract:
ABSTRACT— Efficient word recognition depends on detecting critical phonetic differences among similar-sounding words, or sensitivity to phonological distinctiveness , an ability evident at 19 months of age but unreliable at 14 to 15 months of age. However, little is known about phonological constancy , the equally crucial ability to recognize a word's identity across natural phonetic variations, such as those in cross-dialect pronunciation differences. We show that 15- and 19-month-old children recognize familiar words spoken in their native dialect, but that only the older children recognize familiar words in a dissimilar nonnative dialect, providing evidence for emergence of phonological constancy by 19 months. These results are compatible with a perceptual-attunement account of developmental change in early word recognition, but not with statistical-learning or phonological accounts. Thus, the complementary skills of phonological constancy and distinctiveness both appear at around 19 months of age, together providing the child with a fundamental insight that permits rapid vocabulary growth and later reading acquisition.
Keywords:
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