Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.

In this paper, we report data on the development of Korean infants' perception of a rare fricative phoneme distinction. Korean fricative consonants have received much interest in the linguistic community due to the language's distinct categorization of sounds. Unlike many fricative contras...

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Main Authors: Minha Shin, Youngon Choi, Reiko Mazuka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5999286?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2241e1a38d234edd810606cf22ccfbb52020-11-24T20:41:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01136e019904510.1371/journal.pone.0199045Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.Minha ShinYoungon ChoiReiko MazukaIn this paper, we report data on the development of Korean infants' perception of a rare fricative phoneme distinction. Korean fricative consonants have received much interest in the linguistic community due to the language's distinct categorization of sounds. Unlike many fricative contrasts utilized in most of the world's languages, Korean fricatives (/s*/-/s/) are all voiceless. Moreover, compared with other sound categories, fricatives have received very little attention in the speech perception development field and no studies thus far have examined Korean infants' development of native phonology in this domain. Using a visual habituation paradigm, we tested 4‒6-month-old and 7‒9-month-old Korean infants on their abilities to discriminate the Korean fricative pair in the [a] vowel context, /s*a/-/sa/, which can be distinguished based on acoustic cues, such as the durations of aspiration and frication noise. Korean infants older than 7 months were able to reliably discriminate the fricative pair but younger infants did not show clear signs of such discrimination. These results add to the growing evidence that there are native sound contrasts infants cannot discriminate early on without a certain amount of language exposure, providing further data to help delineate the specific nature of early perceptual capacity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5999286?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Minha Shin
Youngon Choi
Reiko Mazuka
spellingShingle Minha Shin
Youngon Choi
Reiko Mazuka
Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Minha Shin
Youngon Choi
Reiko Mazuka
author_sort Minha Shin
title Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
title_short Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
title_full Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
title_fullStr Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
title_full_unstemmed Development of fricative sound perception in Korean infants: The role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
title_sort development of fricative sound perception in korean infants: the role of language experience and infants' initial sensitivity.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description In this paper, we report data on the development of Korean infants' perception of a rare fricative phoneme distinction. Korean fricative consonants have received much interest in the linguistic community due to the language's distinct categorization of sounds. Unlike many fricative contrasts utilized in most of the world's languages, Korean fricatives (/s*/-/s/) are all voiceless. Moreover, compared with other sound categories, fricatives have received very little attention in the speech perception development field and no studies thus far have examined Korean infants' development of native phonology in this domain. Using a visual habituation paradigm, we tested 4‒6-month-old and 7‒9-month-old Korean infants on their abilities to discriminate the Korean fricative pair in the [a] vowel context, /s*a/-/sa/, which can be distinguished based on acoustic cues, such as the durations of aspiration and frication noise. Korean infants older than 7 months were able to reliably discriminate the fricative pair but younger infants did not show clear signs of such discrimination. These results add to the growing evidence that there are native sound contrasts infants cannot discriminate early on without a certain amount of language exposure, providing further data to help delineate the specific nature of early perceptual capacity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5999286?pdf=render
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