Young infants are sensitive to prosody, which they use to distinguish between speakers and between languages. Indeed, patterns of language discrimination have been interpreted as supporting a rhythm class typology, where the rhythmic nature of earliest language exposure determines the primary perceptual units of speech segmentation. In previous studies, five-month-old infants discriminated languages from different putative rhythm classes, but only within a class where one or both languages are familiar. Thus, English infants did not distinguish syllable-timed Italian and Spanish, nor stress-timed Dutch and German, but Spanish infants distinguished syllable-timed Catalan and Spanish. In three head-turn preference experiments, we tested whether English five-month-olds could discriminate pairwise between French, Spanish and Finnish. Although all have been categorized as syllable-timed, they differ in their realization and distribution of strong syllables. In each experiment, we familiarized infants to one of two languages and then exposed them to new speakers from the same or the other language. With French and Spanish, infants looked longer to the new language than the familiar one, indicating discrimination. They failed, however, to discriminate French/Finnish or Spanish/Finnish. These results strongly suggest that rather than sensitivity to discrete classes discrimination reflects exploitation of gradient prosodic differences.
DOI: 10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-116
White, L., Luche, C.D., Floccia, C. (2016) Five-month-old infants discrimination of unfamiliar languages does not accord with "rhythm class". Proc. Speech Prosody 2016, 567-571.
@inproceedings{White+2016, author={Laurence White and Claire Delle Luche and Caroline Floccia}, title={Five-month-old infants discrimination of unfamiliar languages does not accord with "rhythm class"}, year=2016, booktitle={Speech Prosody 2016}, doi={10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-116}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-116}, pages={567--571} }