“…Findings in studies such as Levy and Strange (2008) converge with the results of many other studies (e.g., Bradlow, Pisoni, Akahane-Yamada and Tohkura, 1997;Wang, Spence, Jongman and Sereno, 1999;Aoyama, Flege, Guion, Akahane-Yamada and Yamada, 2004;Tajima, Kato, Rothwell, Akahane-Yamada and Munhall, 2008) in suggesting that L2 experience generally helps the L2 learner to become more skilled at perceiving the L2 (though see Holliday, 2016 for an interesting counterexample from L1 Mandarin learners of Korean). This positive correlation between L2 experience and L2 perceptual performance can be attributed to two beneficial, and related, outcomes of L2 speech learning: (1) development of mental representations for the contrastive sounds of the L2, particularly those which do not occur in the L1, and (2) development of SPRs for the L2.…”