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1.
J Child Lang ; 47(3): 600-632, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31775942

ABSTRACT

Some theories of Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) explain the linguistic deficits observed in terms of limitations in non-linguistic cognitive systems such as working memory. The goal of this research is to clarify the relationship between working memory and the processing of complex sentences by exploring the performance of 28 French-speaking children with DLD aged five to fourteen years and 48 typically developing children of the same age in memory and linguistic tasks. We identified predictive relationships between working memory and the comprehension and repetition of complex sentences in both groups. As for syntactic measures in spontaneous language, it is the complex spans that explain the major part of the variance in the control children. In children with DLD, however, simple spans are predictive of these syntactic measures. Our results thus reveal a robust relationship between working memory and syntactic complexity, with clinical implications for the treatment of children with DLD.


Subject(s)
Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Memory, Short-Term , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Comprehension , Female , Humans , Language Development Disorders/psychology , Linguistics , Male
2.
Lang Speech ; 61(1): 3-30, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29280405

ABSTRACT

This study examines how French listeners segment and learn new words of artificial languages varying in the presence of different combinations of sublexical segmentation cues. The first experiment investigated the contribution of three different types of sublexical cues (acoustic-phonetic, phonological and prosodic cues) to word learning. The second experiment explored how participants specifically exploited sublexical prosodic cues. Whereas complementary cues signaling word-initial and word-final boundaries had synergistic effects on word learning in the first experiment, the two manipulated prosodic cues redundantly signaling word-final boundaries in the second experiment were rank-ordered with final pitch variations being more weighted than final lengthening. These results are discussed in light of the notions of cue type, cue position and cue efficiency.


Subject(s)
Cues , Learning , Phonetics , Speech Acoustics , Speech Perception , Voice Quality , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction Time , Time Factors , Young Adult
3.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 140(3): 1871, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27914420

ABSTRACT

This study examined whether the ability of southern French speakers to discriminate between standard French word forms such as /pike/ and /pikε/ can be improved by a training procedure in which participants were exposed to the orthographic representations of words forming /e/-/ε/ minimal pairs. The results of the training procedure showed that southern French speakers were able to perceive the /e/-/ε/ contrast in word final position when they associated words containing these vowels with their correct spelled form. Further, participants in a priming experiment, which was run immediately after training, no longer showed the priming effect on the trained minimal pairs that they had shown in the pre-test. However, a priming effect on the untrained minimal pairs was still observed immediately after training, showing that this training failed to transfer to untrained items. Finally, the benefits of the training procedure were no longer observed the day after training, since southern French speakers once again showed a priming effect on the trained minimal pair of words in a one day post-test. Implications of these findings for the locus of the difficulties of the southern French speakers with the word-final /e/-/ε/ contrast are discussed.


Subject(s)
Phonetics , Humans , Speech Perception
4.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 139(3): 1333-42, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27036270

ABSTRACT

This event-related potential study examined whether French listeners use stress at a phonological level when discriminating between stressed and unstressed words in their language. Participants heard five words and made same/different decisions about the final word (male voice) with respect to the four preceding words (different female voices). Compared to the first four context words, the target word was (i) phonemically and prosodically identical (/ʃu/-/ʃu/; control condition), (ii) phonemically identical but differing in the presence of a primary stress (/ʃu'/-/ʃu/), (iii) prosodically identical but phonemically different (/ʃo/-/ʃu/), or (iv) both phonemically and prosodically different (/ʃo'/-/ʃu/). Crucially, differences on the P200 and the following N200 components were observed for the /ʃu'/-/ʃu/ and the /ʃo/-/ʃu/ conditions compared to the /ʃu/-/ʃu/ control condition. Moreover, on the N200 component more negativity was observed for the /ʃo/-/ʃu/ condition compared to the /ʃu'/-/ʃu/ conditions, while no difference emerged between these two conditions on the earlier P200 component. Crucially, the results suggest that French listeners are capable of creating an abstract representation of stress. However, as they receive more input, participants react more strongly to phonemic than to stress information.


Subject(s)
Phonetics , Speech Acoustics , Speech Perception , Voice Quality , Acoustic Stimulation , Acoustics , Adolescent , Adult , Audiometry, Speech , Cues , Discrimination, Psychological , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Multilingualism , Psychoacoustics , Sound Spectrography , Young Adult
5.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; 69(1): 180-96, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26041020

ABSTRACT

Both phonological and phonetic priming studies reveal inhibitory effects that have been interpreted as resulting from lexical competition between the prime and the target. We present a series of phonetic priming experiments that contrasted this lexical locus explanation with that of a prelexical locus by manipulating the lexical status of the prime and the target and the task used. In the related condition of all experiments, spoken targets were preceded by spoken primes that were phonetically similar but shared no phonemes with the target (/bak/-/dεt/). In Experiments 1 and 2, word and nonword primes produced an inhibitory effect of equal size in shadowing and same-different tasks respectively. Experiments 3 and 4 showed robust inhibitory phonetic priming on both word and nonword targets in the shadowing task, but no effect at all in a lexical decision task. Together, these findings show that the inhibitory phonetic priming effect occurs independently of the lexical status of both the prime and the target, and only in tasks that do not necessarily require the activation of lexical representations. Our study thus argues in favour of a prelexical locus for this effect.


Subject(s)
Inhibition, Psychological , Phonetics , Recognition, Psychology , Semantics , Speech Perception/physiology , Decision Making , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction Time/physiology , Statistics, Nonparametric , Students , Universities , Vocabulary
6.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 138(2): 817-32, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26328698

ABSTRACT

Second-language learners often experience major difficulties in producing non-native speech sounds. This paper introduces a training method that uses a real-time analysis of the acoustic properties of vowels produced by non-native speakers to provide them with immediate, trial-by-trial visual feedback about their articulation alongside that of the same vowels produced by native speakers. The Mahalanobis acoustic distance between non-native productions and target native acoustic spaces was used to assess L2 production accuracy. The experiment shows that 1 h of training per vowel improves the production of four non-native Danish vowels: the learners' productions were closer to the corresponding Danish target vowels after training. The production performance of a control group remained unchanged. Comparisons of pre- and post-training vowel discrimination performance in the experimental group showed improvements in perception. Correlational analyses of training-related changes in production and perception revealed no relationship. These results suggest, first, that this training method is effective in improving non-native vowel production. Second, training purely on production improves perception. Finally, it appears that improvements in production and perception do not systematically progress at equal rates within individuals.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perception/physiology , Feedback, Sensory/physiology , Language , Multilingualism , Phonetics , Photic Stimulation , Adult , Computer Systems , Education , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Neurological , Models, Psychological , Psychomotor Performance , Young Adult
7.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 130(6): 3980-91, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22225052

ABSTRACT

This study presents an analysis of over 4000 tokens of words produced as variants with and without schwa in a French corpus of radio-broadcasted speech. In order to determine which of the many variables mentioned in the literature influence variant choice, 17 predictors were tested in the same analysis. Only five of these variables appeared to condition variant choice. The question of the processing stage, or locus, of this alternation process is also addressed in a comparison of the variables that predict variant choice with the variables that predict the acoustic duration of schwa in variants with schwa. Only two variables predicting variant choice also predict schwa duration. The limited overlap between the predictors for variant choice and for schwa duration, combined with the nature of these variables, suggest that the variants without schwa do not result from a phonetic process of reduction; that is, they are not the endpoint of gradient schwa shortening. Rather, these variants are generated early in the production process, either during phonological encoding or word-form retrieval. These results, based on naturally produced speech, provide a useful complement to on-line production experiments using artificial speech tasks.


Subject(s)
Language , Phonetics , Speech/physiology , France , Humans , Speech Production Measurement
8.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 128(1): EL43-8, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20649188

ABSTRACT

Southern French listeners were trained on the word final Standard French /e/-/epsilon/ contrast that does not exist in their dialect. They learned to associate minimal pairs of new words with visual shapes. Although final training session performance was relatively high, the learning did not transfer to a lexical decision task with phonological priming. Thus successful training on a phonemic contrast did not guarantee the efficient use of this contrast in spoken word recognition tasks. These findings are discussed in light of abstractionist and exemplarist models.


Subject(s)
Language , Phonetics , Recognition, Psychology , Speech Perception , Acoustic Stimulation , Audiometry, Speech , Discrimination, Psychological , France , Humans , Sound Spectrography , Speech Acoustics , Task Performance and Analysis
9.
Cognition ; 111(3): 390-6, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19342011

ABSTRACT

This event-related potential (ERP) study examined the impact of phonological variation resulting from a vowel merger on phoneme perception. The perception of the /e/-/epsilon/ contrast which does not exist in Southern French-speaking regions, and which is in the process of merging in Northern French-speaking regions, was compared to the /ø/-/y/ contrast, which is stable in all French-speaking regions. French-speaking participants from Switzerland for whom the /e/-/epsilon/ contrast is preserved, but who are exposed to different regional variants, had to perform a same-different task. They first heard four phonemically identical but acoustically different syllables (e.g., /be/-/be/-/be/-/be/), and then heard the test syllable which was either phonemically identical to (/be/) or phonemically different from (/bepsilon/) the preceding context stimuli. The results showed that the unstable /e/-/epsilon/ contrast only induced a mismatch negativity (MMN), whereas the /ø/-/y/ contrast elicited both a MMN and electrophysiological differences on the P200. These findings were in line with the behavioral results in which responses were slower and more error-prone in the /e/-/epsilon/ deviant condition than in the /ø/-/y/ deviant condition. Together these findings suggest that the regional variability in the speech input to which listeners are exposed affects the perception of speech sounds in their own accent.


Subject(s)
Electroencephalography , Psycholinguistics , Acoustic Stimulation , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Female , Humans , Language , Male , Young Adult
10.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 121(4): EL131-6, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17471757

ABSTRACT

This study examined the impact on speech processing of regional phonetic/phonological variation in the listener's native language. The perception of the /e/-/epsilon/ and /o/-/upside down c/ contrasts, produced by standard but not southern French native speakers, was investigated in these two populations. A repetition priming experiment showed that the latter but not the former perceived words such as /epe/ and /epepsilon/ as homophones. In contrast, both groups perceived the two words of /o/-/upside down c/ minimal pairs (/pom/-/p(uspide down c)m/) as being distinct. Thus, standard-French words can be perceived differently depending on the listener's regional accent.


Subject(s)
Phonetics , Speech Perception , Speech Production Measurement , Discrimination, Psychological , France , Humans , Reaction Time , Speech Acoustics
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