When Jack isn’t Jacques: Simultaneous opposite language-specific speech perceptual learning in French–English bilinguals

Author:

Caudrelier Tiphaine12ORCID,Ménard Lucie34ORCID,Beausoleil Marie-Michèle34ORCID,Martin Clara D25ORCID,Samuel Arthur G256ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire d’Etude des Mécanismes Cognitifs, Université Lumière Lyon 2, 5 avenue Pierre Mendès France , 69676 BRON Cedex, Lyon , France

2. Basque Center on Cognition Brain and Language (BCBL) , Paseo Mikeletegi 69, Gipuzkoa, San Sebastian 20009 , Spain

3. Département de Linguistique, Pavillon Hubert-Aquin, A-3405, 400 rue Sainte-Catherine Est, Université du Québec à Montréal , Montréal, QC H2L 2C5 , Canada

4. Center for Research on Brain, Language, and Music (CRBLM), 2001 av McGill College, 6th Floor , Montréal, QC H3A 1G1 , Canada

5. Ikerbasque, Basque Foundation for Science , Plaza Euskadi 5, 48009 Bilbao, Bizkaia , Spain

6. Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University , 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook, NY 11794 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Humans are remarkably good at understanding spoken language, despite the huge variability of the signal as a function of the talker, the situation, and the environment. This success relies on having access to stable representations based on years of speech input, coupled with the ability to adapt to short-term deviations from these norms, e.g. accented speech or speech altered by ambient noise. In the last two decades, there has been a robust research effort focused on a possible mechanism for adjusting to accented speech. In these studies, listeners typically hear 15 – 20 words in which a speech sound has been altered, creating a short-term deviation from its longer-term representation. After exposure to these items, listeners demonstrate “lexically driven phonetic recalibration”—they alter their categorization of speech sounds, expanding a speech category to take into account the recently heard deviations from their long-term representations. In the current study, we investigate such adjustments by bilingual listeners. French–English bilinguals were first exposed to nonstandard pronunciations of a sound (/s/ or /f/) in one language and tested for recalibration in both languages. Then, the exposure continued with both the original type of mispronunciation in the same language, plus mispronunciations in the other language, in the opposite direction. In a final test, we found simultaneous recalibration in opposite directions for the two languages—listeners shifted their French perception in one direction and their English in the other: Bilinguals can maintain separate adjustments, for the same sounds, when a talker's speech differs across two languages.

Funder

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Basque Government

Spanish State Research Agency

BCBL Severo Ochoa excellence accreditation

European Research Council

European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference29 articles.

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