Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response

During the first year of life, infants go from perceiving speech sounds primarily based on their acoustic characteristics, to perceiving speech sounds as belonging to speech sound categories relevant in their native language(s). The transition is apparent in that very young infants typically discrim...

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Main Author: Marklund, Ellen
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för lingvistik 2017
Subjects:
MMR
MMN
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http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7797-053-8
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7797-054-5
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-su-1485592017-11-24T05:28:43ZPerceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch responseengMarklund, EllenStockholms universitet, Institutionen för lingvistikStockholm : Department of Linguistics, Stockholm University2017language acquisitioninfantsspeech perceptionMMRMMNperceptual reorganizationGeneral Language Studies and LinguisticsJämförande språkvetenskap och lingvistikDuring the first year of life, infants go from perceiving speech sounds primarily based on their acoustic characteristics, to perceiving speech sounds as belonging to speech sound categories relevant in their native language(s). The transition is apparent in that very young infants typically discriminate both native and non-native speech sound contrasts, whereas older infants show better discrimination for native contrasts and worse or no discrimi­na­tion for non-native contrasts. The rate of this perceptual reorganization depends, among other things, on the salience of the relevant speech sounds within the speech signal. As such, the perceptual reorganization of vowels and lexical tone typically precedes the perceptual reorganization of consonants. Perceptual reorganizatoin of speech sounds is often demonstrated by measuring in­fants’ discrimination of specific speech sound contrasts across development. One way of measuring discriminatory ability is to use the mismatch response (MMR). This is a brain response that can be measured using external electroencephalography re­cord­ings. Pre­senting an oddball (deviant) stimulus among a series of standard stimuli elicits a response that, in adults, correlates well with behavioral discrimination. When the two stimuli are speech sounds contrastive in the listeners’ language, the response arguably reflects both acoustic and linguistic processing. In infants, the response is less studied, but has nevertheless already proven useful for studies on the perceptual reorganization of speech sounds. The present thesis documents a series of studies with the end game of investigating how amount of speech exposure influences the perceptual reorganization, and whe­ther the learning mechanisms involved in speech sound cate­gory learning is specific to speech or domain-general. In order to be able to compare MMR results across diffe­rent age groups in infancy, a non-speech control condition needed to be devised however, to account for changes in the MMR across development that are attributable to general brain matura­tion rather than language development specifically. Findings of studies incorporated in the thesis show that spectrally rotated speech can be used to approximate the acoustic part of the MMR in adults. Subtracting the acoustic part of the MMR from the full MMR thus estimates the part of the MMR that is linked to linguistic, rather than acoustic, processing. The strength of this linguistic part of the MMR in four- and eight-month-old infants is directly related to the daily amount of speech that the infants are exposed to. No evidence of distributional learning of non-speech auditory categories was demonstrated in adults, but the results together with previous research generated hypo­theses for future study. In conclusion, the research performed within the scope of this thesis highlight the need of a non-speech control condition for use in developmental speech perception studies using the MMR, demonstrates the viability of one such non-speech control condition, and points toward relevant future research within the topic of speech sound category development. <p>At the time of the doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 3: Manuscript.</p>Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-148559urn:isbn:978-91-7797-053-8urn:isbn:978-91-7797-054-5application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic language acquisition
infants
speech perception
MMR
MMN
perceptual reorganization
General Language Studies and Linguistics
Jämförande språkvetenskap och lingvistik
spellingShingle language acquisition
infants
speech perception
MMR
MMN
perceptual reorganization
General Language Studies and Linguistics
Jämförande språkvetenskap och lingvistik
Marklund, Ellen
Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
description During the first year of life, infants go from perceiving speech sounds primarily based on their acoustic characteristics, to perceiving speech sounds as belonging to speech sound categories relevant in their native language(s). The transition is apparent in that very young infants typically discriminate both native and non-native speech sound contrasts, whereas older infants show better discrimination for native contrasts and worse or no discrimi­na­tion for non-native contrasts. The rate of this perceptual reorganization depends, among other things, on the salience of the relevant speech sounds within the speech signal. As such, the perceptual reorganization of vowels and lexical tone typically precedes the perceptual reorganization of consonants. Perceptual reorganizatoin of speech sounds is often demonstrated by measuring in­fants’ discrimination of specific speech sound contrasts across development. One way of measuring discriminatory ability is to use the mismatch response (MMR). This is a brain response that can be measured using external electroencephalography re­cord­ings. Pre­senting an oddball (deviant) stimulus among a series of standard stimuli elicits a response that, in adults, correlates well with behavioral discrimination. When the two stimuli are speech sounds contrastive in the listeners’ language, the response arguably reflects both acoustic and linguistic processing. In infants, the response is less studied, but has nevertheless already proven useful for studies on the perceptual reorganization of speech sounds. The present thesis documents a series of studies with the end game of investigating how amount of speech exposure influences the perceptual reorganization, and whe­ther the learning mechanisms involved in speech sound cate­gory learning is specific to speech or domain-general. In order to be able to compare MMR results across diffe­rent age groups in infancy, a non-speech control condition needed to be devised however, to account for changes in the MMR across development that are attributable to general brain matura­tion rather than language development specifically. Findings of studies incorporated in the thesis show that spectrally rotated speech can be used to approximate the acoustic part of the MMR in adults. Subtracting the acoustic part of the MMR from the full MMR thus estimates the part of the MMR that is linked to linguistic, rather than acoustic, processing. The strength of this linguistic part of the MMR in four- and eight-month-old infants is directly related to the daily amount of speech that the infants are exposed to. No evidence of distributional learning of non-speech auditory categories was demonstrated in adults, but the results together with previous research generated hypo­theses for future study. In conclusion, the research performed within the scope of this thesis highlight the need of a non-speech control condition for use in developmental speech perception studies using the MMR, demonstrates the viability of one such non-speech control condition, and points toward relevant future research within the topic of speech sound category development. === <p>At the time of the doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 3: Manuscript.</p>
author Marklund, Ellen
author_facet Marklund, Ellen
author_sort Marklund, Ellen
title Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
title_short Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
title_full Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
title_fullStr Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
title_full_unstemmed Perceptual reorganization of vowels : Separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
title_sort perceptual reorganization of vowels : separating the linguistic and acoustic parts of the mismatch response
publisher Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för lingvistik
publishDate 2017
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-148559
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7797-053-8
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7797-054-5
work_keys_str_mv AT marklundellen perceptualreorganizationofvowelsseparatingthelinguisticandacousticpartsofthemismatchresponse
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