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Speech Perception by 6‐to 8‐Month‐Olds in the Presence of Distracting Sounds
39
Citations
35
References
2008
Year
Distraction Masker ParadigmLanguage DevelopmentSelective AttentionSpeech Sound DisorderPsycholinguisticsSpeech SciencePhonologyDistracting SoundsIntersensory PerceptionDevelopmental SpeechChild LanguagePhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesVisual Fixation ProcedureHealth SciencesAuditory ProcessingCognitive ScienceSpeech ProductionLinguisticsInfant CognitionSpeech CommunicationSpeech AcousticsSpeech PerceptionAuditory System
The role of selective attention in infant phonetic perception was examined using a distraction masker paradigm. We compared perception of /bu/ versus /gu/ in 6‐ to 8‐month‐olds using a visual fixation procedure. Infants were habituated to multiple natural productions of 1 syllable type and then presented 4 test trials (old‐new‐old‐new). Perception of the new syllable (indexed as novelty preference) was compared across 3 groups: habituated and tested on syllables in quiet (Group 1), habituated and tested on syllables mixed with a nonspeech signal (Group 2), and habituated with syllables mixed with a non‐speech signal and tested on syllables in quiet (Group 3). In Groups 2 and 3, each syllable was mixed with a segment spliced from a recording of bird and cricket songs. This nonspeech signal has no overlapping frequencies with the syllable; it is not expected to alter the sensory structure or perceptual coherence of the syllable. Perception was negatively affected by the presence of the auditory distracter during habituation; individual performance levels also varied more in these groups. The findings show that perceiving speech in the presence of irrelevant sounds poses a cognitive challenge for young infants. We conclude that selective attention is an important skill that supports speech perception in infants; the significance of this skill for language learning during infancy deserves investigation.
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