New Insights Into Old Puzzles From Infants' Categorical Discrimination of Soundless Phonetic Units

被引:39
作者
Baker, Stephanie [1 ,2 ]
Golinkoff, Roberta [3 ]
Petitto, Laura-Ann [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Psychol & Brain Sci, 305 Moore Hall, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
[2] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Educ, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
[3] Univ Delaware, Sch Educ, Newark, DE 19716 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1207/s15473341lld0203_1
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
For 4 decades, serious scientific debate has persisted as to whether infants' remarkable capacity to detect and categorize phonetic units is derived from language-specific mechanisms or whether this capacity develops out of general perceptual mechanisms. The heart of this controversy has revolved around whether the young human brain is specialized to detect the underlying contrasting patterns in language or whether it simply processes general auditory perceptual features of sound that, over time, become utilized for language learning. This article takes a novel look at this question by using soundless phonetic units from a natural signed language as a new research tool. Research finds that 4-month-old hearing infants categorize soundless phonetic units on the basis of linguistic category membership, whereas 14-month-old infants fail to do so-thereby exhibiting the identical initial capacity and classic developmental shift in infant categorical discrimination of native and nonnative (foreign language) phonetic units in speech. These results suggest a novel testable hypothesis: Infants may begin life with the capacity to detect specific patterned units with alternating contrasts unique to natural language organization and to categorize them on the basis of linguistic category membership.
引用
收藏
页码:147 / 162
页数:16
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