34 research outputs found

    Perceptual development of the Finnish /t-t:/ distinction in Dutch 12-year-old children : a training study

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    This paper addresses the issue of how perceptual sensitivity develops in child L2 learners along an acoustic dimension that contrasts two non-native speech sounds, and of how their language learning compares to that of adult learners, as investigated in [Heeren and Schouten (2008), Perceptual development of phoneme contrasts: How sensitivity changes along acoustic dimensions that contrast phoneme categories. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 124, 2291-2302]. A pretest-training-posttest design was used to tap into the learning process, and development was predicted to occur mainly through increased sensitivity in the newly trained category boundary region, i.e. acquired distinctiveness, rather than through a decrease in sensitivity within the new categories, i.e. acquired similarity. This prediction was borne out by both adult and 12-year-old learners of the Finnish quantity contrast, but changes remained small. Even though the manner and speed of learning were comparable between age groups, adults showed higher discrimination scores than children did
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