4.7 Article

Earlier Speech Exposure Does Not Accelerate Speech Acquisition

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 33, Pages 11159-11163

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6516-11.2012

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Funding

  1. Fondecyt [1060767, 1110928]

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Critical periods in language acquisition have been discussed primarily with reference to studies of people who are deaf or bilingual. Here, we provide evidence on the opening of sensitivity to the linguistic environment by studying the response to a change of phoneme at a native and nonnative phonetic boundary in full-term and preterm human infants using event-related potentials. Full-term infants show a decline in their discrimination of nonnative phonetic contrasts between 9 and 12 months of age. Because the womb is a high-frequency filter, many phonemes are strongly degraded in utero. Preterm infants thus benefit from earlier and richer exposure to broadcast speech. We find that preterms do not take advantage of this enriched linguistic environment: the decrease in amplitude of the mismatch response to a nonnative change of phoneme at the end of the first year of life was dependent on maturational age and not on the duration of exposure to broadcast speech. The shaping of phonological representations by the environment is thus strongly constrained by brain maturation factors.

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