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Proficiency in a second language (L2) may depend upon the age of exposure and the continued use of the mother tongue (L1)
during L2 acquisition. The effect of early L2 exposure on the preattentive perception of native and non-native vowel contrasts
was studied by measuring the mismatch negativity (MMN) response from 14-year-old children. The test group consisted of six
Finnish children who had participated in English immersion education. The control group consisted of eight monolingual Finns.
The subjects were presented with Finnish and English synthetic vowel contrasts. The aim was to see whether early exposure
had resulted in the development of a new language-specific memory trace for the contrast phonemically irrelevant in L1. The
results indicated that only the contrast with the largest acoustic distance elicited an MMN response in the Bilingual group,
while the Monolingual group showed a response also to the native contrast. This may suggest that native-like memory traces
for prototypical vowels were not formed in early language immersion. 相似文献
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The aim of this study was to determine whether the type of bilingualism affects neural organisation. We performed identification experiments and mismatch negativity (MMN) registrations in Finnish and Swedish language settings to see, whether behavioural identification and neurophysiological discrimination of vowels depend on the linguistic context, and whether there is a difference between two kinds of bilinguals. The stimuli were two vowels, which differentiate meaning in Finnish, but not in Swedish. The results indicate that Balanced Bilinguals are inconsistent in identification performance, and they have a longer MMN latency. Moreover, their MMN amplitude is context-independent, while Dominant Bilinguals show a larger MMN in the Finnish context. These results indicate that Dominant Bilinguals inhibit the preattentive discrimination of native contrast in a context where the distinction is non-phonemic, but this is not possible for Balanced Bilinguals. This implies that Dominant Bilinguals have separate systems, while Balanced Bilinguals have one inseparable system. 相似文献
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The present study investigated whether facial expressions modulate visual attention in 7-month-old infants. First, infants' looking duration to individually presented fearful, happy, and novel facial expressions was compared to looking duration to a control stimulus (scrambled face). The face with a novel expression was included to examine the hypothesis that the earlier findings of greater allocation of attention to fearful as compared to happy faces could be due to the novelty of fearful faces in infants' rearing environment. The infants looked longer at the fearful face than at the control stimulus, whereas no such difference was found between the other expressions and the control stimulus. Second, a gap/overlap paradigm was used to determine whether facial expressions affect the infants' ability to disengage their fixation from a centrally presented face and shift attention to a peripheral target. It was found that infants disengaged their fixation significantly less frequently from fearful faces than from control stimuli and happy faces. Novel facial expressions did not have a similar effect on attention disengagement. Thus, it seems that adult-like modulation of the disengagement of attention by threat-related stimuli can be observed early in life, and that the influence of emotionally salient (fearful) faces on visual attention is not simply attributable to the novelty of these expressions in infants' rearing environment. 相似文献
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Saloranta Antti Heikkola Leena Maria Peltola Maija S. 《Journal of psycholinguistic research》2022,51(4):885-901
Journal of Psycholinguistic Research - Phonological duration differences in quantity languages can be problematic for second language learners whose native language does not use duration... 相似文献
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Kaija Puura Jukka Leppänen Raili Salmelin Mirjami Mäntymaa Ilona Luoma Reija Latva Mikko Peltola Terho Lehtimäki Tuula Tamminen 《Infant mental health journal》2019,40(4):459-478
The aim of the study was to analyze which maternal factors (depressive symptoms, effect of life events, maternal sensitivity and structuring) and infant characteristics (temperament, social withdrawal symptoms, interactive behavior, genotype, gender) contribute to shared pleasure (SP) in parent–infant interaction. Participants were 113 mother–infant dyads. The mothers filled in the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, the Infant Behavior Questionnaire, and the Life Events Questionnaire. The dyads were videotaped in a free-play situation, and the videos were analyzed using the Alarm Distress Baby Scale and the Emotional Availability Scales. The infants were genotyped for four genes involved in emotion regulation. The occurrence and duration of SP (SP-MD) in mother–infant interactions were analyzed from the videotapes. Higher maternal sensitivity and depressive symptoms, better infant responsiveness, and the infant having the GG variant of the gene tryptophan hydroxylase isoform 2 (TPH2) -307 were associated with the occurrence of SP. Lower level depressive symptoms, better maternal structuring, and greater infant involvement were associated with the longer duration of SP. Those dyads where the mother and infant were best able to read each other's positive cues and to respond to them were more likely to experience mutual positive affect, as seen in SP. 相似文献
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