Fuhrmeister Pamela, Schlemmer Brianna, Myers Emily B
Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2020 Aug 10;63(8):2667-2679. doi: 10.1044/2020_JSLHR-19-00358. Epub 2020 Aug 5.
Purpose Children and early adolescents seem to have an advantage over adults in acquiring nonnative speech sounds, supported by evidence showing that earlier age of acquisition strongly predicts second language attainment. Although many factors influence children's ultimate success in language learning, it is unknown whether children rely on different, perhaps more efficient learning mechanisms than adults. Method The current study compared children (aged 10-16 years) and adults in their learning of a nonnative Hindi contrast. We tested the hypothesis that younger participants would show superior baseline discriminability or learning of the contrast, better memory for new sounds after a delay, or improved generalization to a new talker's voice. Measures of phonological and auditory skills were collected to determine whether individual variability in these skills predicts nonnative speech sound learning and whether these potential relationships differ between adults and children. Results Adults showed superior pretraining sensitivity to the contrast compared to children, and these pretraining discrimination scores predicted learning and retention. Even though adults seemed to have an initial advantage in learning, children improved after a period of off-line consolidation on the trained identification task and began to catch up to adults after an overnight delay. Additionally, perceptual skills that predicted speech sound learning differed between adults and children, suggesting they rely on different learning mechanisms. Conclusions These findings challenge the view that children are simply better speech sound learners than adults and suggest that their advantages may be due to different learning mechanisms or better retention of nonnative contrasts over the broader language learning trajectory. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.12735914.
目的 有证据表明,习得年龄越早越能有力地预测第二语言的掌握程度,这支持了儿童和青少年在习得非母语语音方面似乎比成年人更具优势的观点。尽管许多因素影响儿童在语言学习中的最终成功,但尚不清楚儿童是否依赖于与成年人不同的、或许更有效的学习机制。方法 本研究比较了儿童(10至16岁)和成年人对非母语印地语语音对比的学习情况。我们检验了这样一个假设,即较年轻的参与者在对比的基线辨别能力或学习方面表现更优,在延迟后对新声音的记忆更好,或者对新说话者的声音有更好的泛化能力。收集了语音和听觉技能的测量数据,以确定这些技能的个体差异是否能预测非母语语音学习,以及这些潜在关系在成年人和儿童之间是否存在差异。结果 与儿童相比,成年人在预训练时对该对比表现出更高的敏感性,这些预训练辨别分数能够预测学习和记忆情况。尽管成年人在学习初期似乎具有优势,但儿童在经过一段时间的离线巩固训练后,在已训练的识别任务上有所进步,并且在经过一夜的延迟后开始赶上成年人。此外,预测语音学习的感知技能在成年人和儿童之间存在差异,这表明他们依赖于不同学习机制。结论 这些发现挑战了儿童在语音学习方面比成年人单纯更优秀的观点,并表明他们的优势可能归因于不同的学习机制,或者在更广泛的语言学习轨迹中对非母语语音对比有更好的记忆。补充材料 https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.12735914