J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 2024 Jul;50(7):739. doi: 10.1037/xhp0001225.
Reports an error in "Is musical expertise associated with self-reported foreign-language ability" by E. Glenn Schellenberg, Ana Isabel Correia and César F. Lima (, 2023[Jul], Vol 49[7], 1083-1089). In the article, the following funding information was missing from the author note: "This work was funded by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology through a PhD studentship awarded to Ana Isabel Correia (SFRH/BD/148360/2019), a Scientific Employment Stimulus grant awarded to E. Glenn Schellenberg (CEECIND/03266/2018), and a project grant awarded to César F. Lima (PTDC/PSI-GER/28274/2017) and was cofunded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Lisbon Regional Operational Program (LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-028274) and the Operational Program for Competitiveness and Internationalization (POCI-01-0145-FEDER- 028274)." The online version of this article has been corrected. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2023-76385-001.) Many claims have been made about links between musical expertise and language ability. Rhythm ability, in particular, has been shown to predict phonological, grammatical, and second-language (L2) abilities, whereas music training often predicts reading and speech-perception skills. Here, we asked whether musical expertise-musical ability and/or music training-relates to L2 (English) abilities of Portuguese native speakers. Participants ( = 154) rated their L2 ability on seven 7-point scales, one each for speaking, reading, writing, comprehension, vocabulary, fluency, and accent. They also completed a test of general cognitive ability, an objective test of musical ability with melody and rhythm subtests, and a questionnaire that measured music training and other aspects of musical behaviors. L2 ability correlated positively with education and cognitive ability but not with music training. It also had no association with musical ability or with self-reports of musical behaviors. Moreover, Bayesian analyses provided evidence for the hypotheses (i.e., no link between L2 and rhythm ability, no link between L2 and years of music lessons). In short, our findings-based on participants' self-reports of L2 ability-raise doubts about proposed associations between musical and second-language abilities, which may be limited to specific populations or measures. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
报告E. 格伦·舍伦贝格、安娜·伊莎贝尔·科雷亚和塞萨尔·F. 利马所著的《音乐专长与自我报告的外语能力有关吗》(*, 2023[7月], 第49卷[7], 1083 - 1089页)中的一处错误。在该文章中,作者注释中遗漏了以下资助信息:“本研究由葡萄牙科学技术基金会资助,授予安娜·伊莎贝尔·科雷亚一项博士研究生奖学金(SFRH/BD/148360/2019),授予E. 格伦·舍伦贝格一项科研就业激励资助(CEECIND/03266/2018),授予塞萨尔·F. 利马一项项目资助(PTDC/PSI - GER/28274/2017),并由欧洲区域发展基金通过里斯本区域运营计划(LISBOA - 01 - 0145 - FEDER - 028274)和竞争力与国际化运营计划(POCI - 01 - 0145 - FEDER - 028274)共同资助。”本文的网络版本已作更正。(以下是原始文章的摘要,记录于2023 - 76385 - 001。)关于音乐专长与语言能力之间的联系有诸多说法。尤其是节奏能力,已被证明可预测语音、语法和第二语言(L2)能力,而音乐训练通常可预测阅读和言语感知技能。在此,我们探讨音乐专长——音乐能力和/或音乐训练——是否与以葡萄牙语为母语者的L2(英语)能力相关。参与者( = 154)在七个7分制量表上对他们的L2能力进行评分,分别针对口语、阅读、写作、理解、词汇、流利度和口音。他们还完成了一项一般认知能力测试、一项包含旋律和节奏子测试的音乐能力客观测试以及一份测量音乐训练和音乐行为其他方面的问卷。L2能力与教育程度和认知能力呈正相关,但与音乐训练无关。它也与音乐能力或音乐行为的自我报告没有关联。此外,贝叶斯分析为这些假设提供了证据(即L2与节奏能力之间无关联,L2与音乐课年限之间无关联)。简而言之,我们基于参与者对L2能力的自我报告得出的研究结果,对音乐与第二语言能力之间的既定关联提出了质疑,这种关联可能仅限于特定人群或测量方式。(PsycInfo数据库记录 (c) 2024美国心理学会,保留所有权利)