4.5 Article

Research Article Tone Deafness in Music Does Not Preclude Distributional Learning of Nonnative Tonal Languages in Individuals With Congenital Amusia

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH
Volume 66, Issue 7, Pages 2461-2477

Publisher

AMER SPEECH-LANGUAGE-HEARING ASSOC
DOI: 10.1044/2023_JSLHR-22-00572

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This study investigated whether adult Chinese-speaking listeners with amusia were able to learn Thai lexical tones through distributional learning. The results showed that individuals with amusia were less accurate in discriminating Thai lexical tones compared to typical listeners. However, amusics showed perceptual gains from pretest to posttest in bimodal distribution conditions, suggesting that they are still capable of learning lexical tones despite their impairment in pitch processing.
Purpose: Previous studies have shown that individuals with congenital amusia exhibit deficient pitch processing across music and language domains. This study investigated whether adult Chinese-speaking listeners with amusia were still able to learn Thai lexical tones based on stimulus frequency of statistical distribution via distributional learning, despite their degraded lexical tone perception. Method: Following a pretest-training-posttest design, 21 amusics and 23 typical, musically intact listeners were assigned into bimodal and unimodal distribution conditions. Listeners were asked to discriminate minimal pairs of Thai midlevel tone and falling tone superimposed on variable base syllables and uttered by different speakers. The perceptual accuracy for each test session and improvement from pretest to posttest were collected and analyzed between the two groups using generalized mixed-effects models. Results: When discriminating Thai lexical tones, amusics were less accurate than typical listeners. Nonetheless, similarly to control listeners, perceptual gains from pretest to posttest were observed in bimodally rather than unimodally trained amusics, as evidenced by both trained and nontrained test words. Conclusions: Amusics are able to learn lexical tones in a second or foreign context of speech. This extends previous research by showing that amusics' distributional learning of linguistic pitch remains largely preserved despite their degraded pitch processing. It is thus likely that manifestations of amusia in speech could not result from their abnormal statistical learning mechanism. This study meanwhile provides a heuristic approach for future studies to apply this paradigm into amusics' treatment to mitigate their pitch-processing disorder.

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