Giannakopoulou Anastasia, Brown Helen, Clayards Meghan, Wonnacott Elizabeth
School of Psychology, University of Bedfordshire, Luton, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
PeerJ. 2017 May 30;5:e3209. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3209. eCollection 2017.
High talker variability (i.e., multiple voices in the input) has been found effective in training nonnative phonetic contrasts in adults. A small number of studies suggest that children also benefit from high-variability phonetic training with some evidence that they show greater learning (more plasticity) than adults given matched input, although results are mixed. However, no study has directly compared the effectiveness of high versus low talker variability in children.
Native Greek-speaking eight-year-olds ( = 52), and adults ( = 41) were exposed to the English /i/-/ɪ/ contrast in 10 training sessions through a computerized word-learning game. Pre- and post-training tests examined discrimination of the contrast as well as lexical learning. Participants were randomly assigned to high (four talkers) or low (one talker) variability training conditions.
Both age groups improved during training, and both improved more while trained with a single talker. Results of a three-interval oddity discrimination test did not show the predicted benefit of high-variability training in either age group. Instead, children showed an effect in the direction-i.e., reliably greater improvements in discrimination following single talker training, even for untrained generalization items, although the result is qualified by (accidental) differences between participant groups at pre-test. Adults showed a numeric advantage for high-variability but were inconsistent with respect to voice and word novelty. In addition, no effect of variability was found for lexical learning. There was no evidence of greater plasticity for phonetic learning in child learners.
This paper adds to the handful of studies demonstrating that, like adults, child learners can improve their discrimination of a phonetic contrast via computerized training. There was no evidence of a benefit of training with multiple talkers, either for discrimination or word learning. The results also do not support the findings of greater plasticity in child learners found in a previous paper (Giannakopoulou, Uther & Ylinen, 2013a). We discuss these results in terms of various differences between training and test tasks used in the current work compared with previous literature.
已有研究发现,高度的说话者变异性(即输入中有多种声音)在训练成人的非母语语音对比方面是有效的。少数研究表明,儿童也能从高变异性语音训练中受益,有证据显示,与接受匹配输入的成人相比,儿童展现出更强的学习能力(更大的可塑性),尽管结果不一。然而,尚无研究直接比较高说话者变异性与低说话者变异性对儿童的有效性。
以希腊语为母语的8岁儿童(n = 52)和成人(n = 41)通过电脑化单词学习游戏,在10次训练课程中接触英语 /i/-/ɪ/ 对比。训练前和训练后的测试考察了对该对比的辨别能力以及词汇学习情况。参与者被随机分配至高变异性(四名说话者)或低变异性(一名说话者)训练条件。
两个年龄组在训练期间均有进步,且在由单一说话者训练时进步更大。三区间奇异辨别测试的结果并未显示高变异性训练对任何一个年龄组有预期的益处。相反,儿童呈现出一种效应——即,即使对于未训练的泛化项目,在单一说话者训练后辨别能力的改善也可靠地更大,尽管该结果因测试前参与者组之间的(偶然)差异而受到限制。成人在高变异性方面显示出数值上的优势,但在声音和单词新颖性方面并不一致。此外,未发现变异性对词汇学习有影响。没有证据表明儿童学习者在语音学习方面具有更大的可塑性。
本文补充了少数研究,证明与成人一样,儿童学习者可以通过电脑化训练提高其对语音对比的辨别能力。没有证据表明多名说话者的训练对辨别或单词学习有益。研究结果也不支持前一篇论文(Giannakopoulou、Uther和Ylinen,2013a)中发现的儿童学习者具有更大可塑性的结论。我们根据当前研究中使用的训练和测试任务与先前文献之间的各种差异来讨论这些结果。