Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University, New York.
PRIISM Applied Statistics Center, Department of Applied Statistics, Social Science, and Humanities, New York University, New York.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2019 May 21;62(5):1427-1436. doi: 10.1044/2019_JSLHR-L-18-0160.
Purpose Previous studies with children and adults have demonstrated a familiar talker advantage-better word recognition for familiar talkers. The goal of the current study was to test whether this phenomenon is modulated by a child's language ability. Method Sixty children with a range of language ability were trained to learn the voices of 3 foreign-accented, German-English bilingual talkers and received feedback about their performance. Both before and after this talker voice training, children completed a spoken word recognition task in which they heard consonant-vowel-consonant words mixed with noise that were spoken by the 3 familiarized talkers and by 3 unfamiliar German-English bilinguals. Results Two findings emerged from this study: First, children with both higher and lower language ability performed similarly on the familiarized talkers. Second, children with higher language scores performed similarly on both the familiarized and unfamiliar talkers, whereas children with lower language scores performed worse on the unfamiliar talkers compared to familiar talkers, suggesting an inability to generalize to novel, unfamiliar talkers who spoke with a similar accent. Discussion Together, these findings indicate that children with higher language scores are able to generalize knowledge about foreign-accented talkers to help spoken word recognition for novel talkers with the same accent. In contrast, children with lower language skills did not exhibit the same magnitude of generalization. This lack of generalization to similar talkers may mean that children with lower language skills are at a disadvantage in spoken language tasks because they are unable to process speech as well when listening to unfamiliar talkers.
目的 先前对儿童和成人的研究表明存在熟悉说话者优势——熟悉说话者的单词识别能力更好。本研究的目的是测试该现象是否受儿童语言能力的调节。
方法 60 名具有不同语言能力的儿童接受了训练,以学习 3 位带有外国口音的德英双语说话者的声音,并获得了有关其表现的反馈。在进行说话者声音训练之前和之后,孩子们都完成了一项口语识别任务,他们听到了由 3 位熟悉的说话者和 3 位陌生的德英双语说话者说出的带有噪声的辅音-元音-辅音单词。
结果 这项研究有两个发现:首先,语言能力较高和较低的儿童在熟悉的说话者方面表现相似。其次,语言得分较高的儿童在熟悉和陌生说话者上的表现相似,而语言得分较低的儿童在陌生说话者上的表现不如熟悉说话者,这表明他们无法将知识推广到口音相似的新的陌生说话者。
讨论 综上所述,这些发现表明,语言能力较高的儿童能够将关于外国口音说话者的知识推广到帮助识别具有相同口音的新说话者的口语中。相比之下,语言能力较低的儿童没有表现出相同程度的推广。这种对相似说话者的缺乏推广可能意味着语言能力较低的儿童在口语任务中处于劣势,因为他们在听陌生说话者时无法像处理熟悉说话者的语音那样好地处理语音。