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Abstraction and the (Misnamed) Language Familiarity Effect
Authors:Elizabeth K. Johnson  Laurence Bruggeman  Anne Cutler
Affiliation:1. Department of PsychologyUniversity of Toronto;2. Department of LinguisticsMacquarie University;3. ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders;4. The MARCS InstituteWestern Sydney University;5. ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language;6. Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Abstract:Talkers are recognized more accurately if they are speaking the listeners’ native language rather than an unfamiliar language. This “language familiarity effect” has been shown not to depend upon comprehension and must instead involve language sound patterns. We further examine the level of sound‐pattern processing involved, by comparing talker recognition in foreign languages versus two varieties of English, by (a) English speakers of one variety, (b) English speakers of the other variety, and (c) non‐native listeners (more familiar with one of the varieties). All listener groups performed better with native than foreign speech, but no effect of language variety appeared: Native listeners discriminated talkers equally well in each, with the native variety never outdoing the other variety, and non‐native listeners discriminated talkers equally poorly in each, irrespective of the variety's familiarity. The results suggest that this talker recognition effect rests not on simple familiarity, but on an abstract level of phonological processing.
Keywords:Talker recognition  Language familiarity effect  Native language  Dialect  Abstraction
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