4.3 Article

Distributional Learning of Speech Sounds: An Exploratory Study Into the Effects of Prior Language Experience

Journal

LANGUAGE LEARNING
Volume 71, Issue 1, Pages 131-161

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/lang.12432

Keywords

distributional learning; prior experience; vowel length; speech sound learning

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [18-01799S]
  2. Charles University [Primus/17/HUM/19]
  3. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [446-14-012]

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This study investigated the impact of prior linguistic experience on distributional learning outcomes, finding that different language backgrounds may influence how individuals respond to distributional training with speech.
Distributional learning is typically understood as (unattended) tracking of stimulus probabilities. Distributional training with speech yields mixed results and the influencing factors have not yet been fully investigated. This study explored whether prior linguistic experience could have an effect on distributional learning outcomes. Czech and Greek adults, whose native languages contain and lack abstract length categories, respectively, were exposed to novel vowels falling into unimodal or bimodal distributions along the durational dimension. A trending interaction suggested that the Czechs and the Greeks might have been affected differently by the distributional exposure. Improved discrimination of the trained contrast was observed in bimodally exposed Czechs (whose prior expectations about length categories could guide learning) and, rather surprisingly, in unimodally exposed Greeks (who, lacking any expectations, might have listened in a noncategorical, auditory mode). Prior linguistic experience could thus affect whether and how experienced language users exploit new distributional speech statistics. This proposal needs to be assessed in future studies.

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