Pitch perception in the first year of life: A comparison of lexical tones and musical pitch

Publication date

2017-03-09

Authors

Chen, AoISNI 0000000419520081
Stevens, Catherine
Kager, ReneORCID 0000-0002-5811-839XISNI 0000000110640747

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Pitch variation is pervasive in speech, regardless of the language to which infants are exposed. Lexical tone is influenced by general sensitivity to pitch. We examined whether the development in lexical tone perception may develop in parallel with perception of pitch in other cognitive domains namely music. Using a visual fixation paradigm, 100 and one 4- and 12-month-old Dutch infants were tested on their discrimination of Chinese rising and dipping lexical tones as well as comparable three-note musical pitch contours. The 4-month-old infants failed to show a discrimination effect in either condition, whereas the 12-month-old infants succeeded in both conditions. These results suggest that lexical tone perception may reflect and relate to general pitch perception abilities, which may serve as a basis for developing more complex language and musical skills.

Keywords

lexical tone, musical pitch, perception development, cross-domain cognition, infancy

Citation

Chen, A, Stevens, C & Kager, R W J 2017, 'Pitch perception in the first year of life: A comparison of lexical tones and musical pitch', Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 8, 297. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00297