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Experience with a second language affects the use of fundamental frequency in speech segmentation

Title
Experience with a second language affects the use of fundamental frequency in speech segmentation
Author
조태홍
Keywords
STATISTICS; LANGUAGE; CUES
Issue Date
2017-07
Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Citation
PLOS ONE, v. 12, no. 7, Article no. e0181709
Abstract
This study investigates whether listeners' experience with a second language learned later in life affects their use of fundamental frequency (F0) as a cue to word boundaries in the segmentation of an artificial language (AL), particularly when the cues to word boundaries conflict between the first language (L1) and second language (L2). F0 signals phrase-final (and thus word-final) boundaries in French but word-initial boundaries in English. Participants were functionally monolingual French listeners, functionally monolingual English listeners, bilingual L1-English L2-French listeners, and bilingual L1-French L2-English listeners. They completed the AL-segmentation task with F0 signaling word-final boundaries or without prosodic cues to word boundaries (monolingual groups only). After listening to the AL, participants completed a forced-choice word-identification task in which the foils were either nonwords or part-words. The results show that the monolingual French listeners, but not the monolingual English listeners, performed better in the presence of F0 cues than in the absence of such cues. Moreover, bilingual status modulated listeners' use of F0 cues to word-final boundaries, with bilingual French listeners performing less accurately than monolingual French listeners on both word types but with bilingual English listeners performing more accurately than monolingual English listeners on non-words. These findings not only confirm that speech segmentation is modulated by the L1, but also newly demonstrate that listeners' experience with the L2 (French or English) affects their use of F0 cues in speech segmentation. This suggests that listeners' use of prosodic cues to word boundaries is adaptive and non-selective, and can change as a function of language experience.
URI
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0181709https://repository.hanyang.ac.kr/handle/20.500.11754/114788
ISSN
1932-6203
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0181709
Appears in Collections:
COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES[S](인문과학대학) > ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE(영어영문학과) > Articles
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