Auditory and linguistic processing of cues for place of articulation by infants |
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Authors: | Peter D. Eimas |
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Affiliation: | 1. W. S. Hunter Laboratory of Psychology, Brown University, 02912, Providence, Rhode Island
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Abstract: | Two- and 3-month-old infants were found to discriminate the acoustic cues for the phonetic feature of place of articulation in a categorical manner; that is, evidence for the discriminability of two synthetic speech patterns was present only when the stimuli signaled a change in the phonetic feature of place. No evidence of discriminability was found when two stimuli, separated by the same acoustic difference, signaled acoustic variations of the same phonetic feature. Discrimination of the same acoustic cues in a nonspeech context was found, in contrast, to be noncategorical or continuous. The results were discussed in terms of infants’ ability to process acoustic events in either an auditory or a linguistic mode. |
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