1992
DOI: 10.1126/science.1736364
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Linguistic Experience Alters Phonetic Perception in Infants by 6 Months of Age

Abstract: Linguistic experience affects phonetic perception. However, the critical period during which experience affects perception and the mechanism responsible for these effects are unknown. This study of 6-month-old infants from two countries, the United States and Sweden, shows that exposure to a specific language in the first half year of life alters infants' phonetic perception.

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Cited by 1,628 publications
(1,095 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
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“…Our data more generally indicate that once children acquire the semantic system of their own language, their nonlinguistic sensitivity to those distinctions not made in their language diminishes over time. There appear to be similarities between the loss in sensitivity to tight versus loose fitting aspects of containment by English speakers shown in Experiment 2 and the loss of phonetic contrasts that are not phonemic in oneÕs native tongue (Kuhl, Williams, Lacerda, Stevens, & Lindblom, 1992;Werker & Lalonde, 1988). But there are many differences between the perceptual tuning of the sounds of oneÕs language and the conceptual tuning of semantic categories that result from what the language emphasizes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Our data more generally indicate that once children acquire the semantic system of their own language, their nonlinguistic sensitivity to those distinctions not made in their language diminishes over time. There appear to be similarities between the loss in sensitivity to tight versus loose fitting aspects of containment by English speakers shown in Experiment 2 and the loss of phonetic contrasts that are not phonemic in oneÕs native tongue (Kuhl, Williams, Lacerda, Stevens, & Lindblom, 1992;Werker & Lalonde, 1988). But there are many differences between the perceptual tuning of the sounds of oneÕs language and the conceptual tuning of semantic categories that result from what the language emphasizes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…In early childhood, native language environment starts to shape the perception of speech sounds (Kuhl et al, 1992;Kuhl et al, 2006;Ortiz-Mantilla et al, 2013), and improvements in speech perception accuracy are still seen during the first three grades . Further, longitudinal studies have found that the differences in speech perception ability between children with and without dyslexia vary depending on age , and suggestions have been made of different developmental trajectory of the perceptual abilities of children with language related difficulties Wright and Zecker, 2004).…”
Section: Atypical Quantity Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, in English, there is a difference in voice onset time between the two instances of /p/ in 'perceptual', but an English child will learn to ignore this difference, whereas she will learn not to ignore the meaningful difference between the voice onset times in the initial sounds in 'pear' and 'bear'. Despite the apparent difficulty of this learning task, infants have already learned their native phonetic contrasts before their first birthday (vowels by six months: Kuhl, Williams, Lacerda, Stevens, & Lindblom, 1992; consonants by ten months: Werker & Tees, 1984). It remains unclear, however, how infants start building such optimally restricted categories, that is, how they learn to focus on only those contrasts that are relevant for their native language (Werker & Tees, 1984).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%