2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2015.08.001
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Learning to speak by listening: Transfer of phonotactics from perception to production

Abstract: The language production and perception systems rapidly learn novel phonotactic constraints. In production, for example, producing syllables in which /f/ is restricted to onset position (e.g. as /h/ is in English) causes one's speech errors to mirror that restriction. We asked whether or not perceptual experience of a novel phonotactic distribution transfers to production. In three experiments, participants alternated hearing and producing strings of syllables. In the same condition, the production and percepti… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…The selected first-order studies tested, in a single-session, the learning of rules involving similar consonants and trial structure as the second-order studies, but lacking the vowel-contingency. Eight second-order and 11 first-order studies met these criteria (Tables S1 and S2) (11,(17)(18)(19)(26)(27)(28)(29)(30). The extent to which slips of restricted consonants maintained their syllable positions (%restricted) was compared with the extent to which the unrestricted control consonants maintained their syllable positions (%unrestricted); the difference between these values served as the index of learning in each study.…”
Section: Metaanalysis Of Speech-error Studies Of First-and Second-ordmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The selected first-order studies tested, in a single-session, the learning of rules involving similar consonants and trial structure as the second-order studies, but lacking the vowel-contingency. Eight second-order and 11 first-order studies met these criteria (Tables S1 and S2) (11,(17)(18)(19)(26)(27)(28)(29)(30). The extent to which slips of restricted consonants maintained their syllable positions (%restricted) was compared with the extent to which the unrestricted control consonants maintained their syllable positions (%unrestricted); the difference between these values served as the index of learning in each study.…”
Section: Metaanalysis Of Speech-error Studies Of First-and Second-ordmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Four papers concern language learning in adults, specifically the way comprehension affects production or vice versa. Kittredge and Dell (2016) report three experiments on the acquisition of novel phonotactic constraints (e.g., ''/f/ appears only as a syllable onset, not as a coda") in a speech production task. They examined whether experiencing the same or an opposing constraint (e.g., ''/f/ appears only as a coda") in another person's speech affected the participants' speech output (specifically the types of errors committed).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But the fact that we found similar results in Study 3, a comprehension task where lexical access was not a factor, as the sentences were given to the participants, supports the interpretation that people construe Body-Agent and Hand-Agent events in different ways. Although the relation between representations underlying production vs. comprehension is a topic of long-standing debate, few researchers argue that these representations are strictly separate (see Kittredge & Dell, 2016;Meyer, Huettig, & Levelt, 2016, for review). More importantly for the current study, conceptual representations of events serve as input to both language production and language comprehension, and production findings (here, the likelihood of mentioning the agent vs. patient as Subject) and comprehension findings (here, different interpretations for agent vs. patient Subjects) both reflect how people conceptualise events.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%