Author:
NATHAN LIZ,WELLS BILL,DONLAN CHRIS
Abstract
The effect of regional accent on children's processing of
speech is a
theoretically and practically important aspect of phonological development
that has been little researched. 48 children from London,
aged four and seven years old, were tested on their ability to repeat and
define single words presented in their own accent and in a Glaswegian
accent. Results showed that word comprehension was significantly
reduced in the Glaswegian condition and that four-year-olds performed
less successfully than seven-year-olds. Both groups made similar
numbers of lexical misidentifications, but the younger children were
more likely to fail to access any word at all. On the repetition task,
the
younger children showed a different pattern of errors to the older
children, their productions being apparently more influenced by the
phonetics of the Glaswegian stimuli. It is suggested that such phonetic
responses are related to the younger children's failure to map the
unfamiliar accent onto their own phonological representations. It is
proposed that the lexical misidentifications, common to both age groups,
are more likely to be induced by lack of context. The paper concludes
with discussion of implications of these findings for our understanding
of how children develop the ability to process unfamiliar regional
accents.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
65 articles.
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