Bilingual exposure influences infant VOT perception
Publication date
2015
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Abstract
Linking the discrimination of voice onset time (VOT) in infancy with infant language background, we examine the perceptual changes of two VOT contrasts (/b/-/p/ and /ph/-/p/) by Dutch monolingual and bilingual infants from 8 to 15 months of age. Results showed that language exposure and language dominance had a strong impact on monolingual and bilingual infant VOT perceptual patterns. In addition, perceptual turbulence was found at 8–9 months for bilingual infants, and stabilized perception was presented for all infants from 11 months onwards. We thus report a general input-driven developmental VOT perception in both monolingual and bilingual infants, with perceptual turbulence for bilinguals in the second half of the first year of life.
Keywords
Infant speech perception, Bilingualism, Language dominance, Voice onset time, Perceptual tuning, Perceptual turbulence, Taverne
Citation
Liu, L & Kager, R W J 2015, 'Bilingual exposure influences infant VOT perception', Infant Behavior and Development, vol. 38, pp. 27-36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2014.12.004