Wanrooij Karin, Boersma Paul, van Zuijen Titia L
Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Research Institute of Child Development and Education, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 7;9(10):e109806. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109806. eCollection 2014.
Distributional learning of speech sounds (i.e., learning from simple exposure to frequency distributions of speech sounds in the environment) has been observed in the lab repeatedly in both infants and adults. The current study is the first attempt to examine whether the capacity for using the mechanism is different in adults than in infants. To this end, a previous event-related potential study that had shown distributional learning of the English vowel contrast /æ/∼/ε/ in 2-to-3-month old Dutch infants was repeated with Dutch adults. Specifically, the adults were exposed to either a bimodal distribution that suggested the existence of the two vowels (as appropriate in English), or to a unimodal distribution that did not (as appropriate in Dutch). After exposure the participants were tested on their discrimination of a representative [æ] and a representative [ε], in an oddball paradigm for measuring mismatch responses (MMRs). Bimodally trained adults did not have a significantly larger MMR amplitude, and hence did not show significantly better neural discrimination of the test vowels, than unimodally trained adults. A direct comparison between the normalized MMR amplitudes of the adults with those of the previously tested infants showed that within a reasonable range of normalization parameters, the bimodal advantage is reliably smaller in adults than in infants, indicating that distributional learning is a weaker mechanism for learning speech sounds in adults (if it exists in that group at all) than in infants.
语音的分布学习(即从简单接触环境中语音的频率分布进行学习)已在实验室中多次观察到,无论是婴儿还是成人。当前的研究首次尝试检验使用该机制的能力在成人和婴儿中是否存在差异。为此,之前一项针对2至3个月大的荷兰婴儿进行的与事件相关电位研究,该研究显示了荷兰婴儿对英语元音对比/æ/∼/ε/的分布学习,此次对荷兰成年人重复了该研究。具体而言,成年人要么接触到表明存在两个元音的双峰分布(如英语中那样),要么接触到不存在这种情况的单峰分布(如荷兰语中那样)。接触之后,参与者在一个用于测量失配反应(MMR)的oddball范式中,接受对代表性的[æ]和代表性的[ε]的辨别测试。接受双峰训练的成年人与接受单峰训练的成年人相比,其MMR振幅并没有显著更大,因此在对测试元音的神经辨别上也没有显著更好的表现。将成年人的标准化MMR振幅与之前测试的婴儿的进行直接比较,结果显示,在合理的标准化参数范围内,成年人的双峰优势比婴儿可靠地小,这表明分布学习在成年人中(如果该群体中确实存在的话)是一种比在婴儿中更弱的学习语音的机制。