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Learning phonotactic constraints from brief auditory experience
Authors:Onishi Kristine H  Chambers Kyle E  Fisher Cynthia
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL 61820, USA. konishi@s.psych.uiuc.edu
Abstract:Three experiments asked whether phonotactic regularities not present in English could be acquired by adult English speakers from brief listening experience. Subjects listened to consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) syllables displaying restrictions on consonant position. Responses in a later speeded repetition task revealed rapid learning of (a) first-order regularities in which consonants were restricted to particular positions (e.g. [baep] not *[paeb]), and (b) second-order regularities in which consonant position depended on the adjacent vowel (e.g. [baep] or [pIb], not *[paeb] or *[bIp]). No evidence of learning was found for second-order regularities in which consonant position depended on speaker's voice. These results demonstrated that phonotactic constraints are rapidly learned from listening experience and that some types of contingencies (consonant-vowel) are more easily learned than others (consonant-voice).
Keywords:Speech perception   Phonotactic learning   Statistical learning
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