4.5 Article

Development of coronal stop perception: Bilingual infants keep pace with their monolingual peers

Journal

COGNITION
Volume 108, Issue 1, Pages 232-242

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2007.12.013

Keywords

bilingual; infant; speech perception; cross-language; development; English; French; coronal

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Previous studies indicate that the discrimination of native phonetic contrasts in infants exposed to two languages from birth follows a different developmental time course from that observed in monolingual infants. We compared infant discrimination of dental (French) and alveolar (English) place variants of /d/ in three groups differing in language experience. At 6-8 months, infants in all three language groups succeeded; at 10-12 months, monolingual English and bilingual but not monolingual French infants distinguished this contrast. Thus, for highly frequent, similar phones, despite overlap in cross-linguistic distributions, bilingual infants performed on par with their English monolingual peers and better than their French monolingual peers. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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