“…Existing studies have shown that adults typically experience more difficulty in perceiving acoustic differences in novel, non-native, phoneme contrasts as compared to children and infants (e.g., Best & Strange, 1992), and are generally poorer at extracting distributional cues from training stimuli (e.g., Wanrooij et al, 2014). This is likely related to the manner in which language learning strategies shift from distributional learning with age, with adults typically favouring the use of more salient acoustic and lexical cues for the acquisition of novel speech sound contrasts (Barrios et al, 2022;Hayes-Harb, 2007;Liu, et al 2022;Werker, 2018). As the study we adapted was originally conducted on Grade 3 Dutch children (Vandermosten et al, 2018), children in the original study were likely more sensitive to the differences in dental-retroflex ambiguity in the stimuli, and would have been more adept at extracting distributional cues from the training set in a much shorter period of time.…”