2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2007.11.042
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Musical aptitude and second language pronunciation skills in school-aged children: Neural and behavioral evidence

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Cited by 118 publications
(119 citation statements)
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“…Another investigated area of transfer is music and language. Practice in music has been found to speed-up literacy skills (Moreno et al 2009) and the studying of foreign languages (Slevc and Miyake 2006;Milovanov et al 2008). Some more general transfer effects have also been found; music education has been found to enhance selective attention (Degé et al 2011) and sensitivity to emotions in speech (Thompson, Schellenberg, and Husain 2004).…”
Section: Social Benefits Of Musicmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Another investigated area of transfer is music and language. Practice in music has been found to speed-up literacy skills (Moreno et al 2009) and the studying of foreign languages (Slevc and Miyake 2006;Milovanov et al 2008). Some more general transfer effects have also been found; music education has been found to enhance selective attention (Degé et al 2011) and sensitivity to emotions in speech (Thompson, Schellenberg, and Husain 2004).…”
Section: Social Benefits Of Musicmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In addition, Posedel et al (2011) and Sadakata and Sekiyama (2011) looked at 'late' L2 learners, some of whom were experts in the music domain, whereas Herrera et al (2011), François et al (2012, Milovanov et al (2008), Delogu et al (2010), and Swaminathan and Gopinath (2013) considered young children whose brains were still at the developmental phase, and music was introduced while L1 and L2 skills were still emerging. The latter studies have an advantage in the participants' age, since there might be a sensitive period, namely around seven years, beyond which music-induced structural alterations in the brain are less salient (Habib & Besson, 2009).…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a consequence of these very diverse definitions, certain individuals describe themselves as "naturally musical" or "musically talented", while others do not. With respect to the relationship between this 'natural' musicality/musical talent and pronunciation proficiency in a second/foreign language, several recent studies indicate that persons with a musical aptitude are more proficient when it comes to pronunciation in a foreign language, both on the perceptual and the productive level (Gilleece, 2006;Milovanov, Huotilainen, Välimäki, Esquef & Tervaniemi, 2008;Milovanov, 2009;Milovanov & Tervaniemi, 2011). However, these studies were conducted with school-aged children, whereas our target group consists of young university students aged between 18 and 24.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%