A Cross- Linguistic Study in Learning Prosodic Rhythms: Rules, Constraints, and Similarity

Author:

Bailey Todd M.1,Plunkett Kim2,Scarpa Ester3

Affiliation:

1. University of Oxford,

2. University of Oxford

3. University of Campinas, Brazil

Abstract

Differences in the learnability of linguistic patterns may be crucial in deciding among alternative learning models. This paper compares the ability of English speakers (Experiment1) and Portuguese speakers (Experiment 2) to learn two complex rhythm patterns observed in languages with primary word stress. Subjects were familiarized with one of two rhythms during a discrimination task, followed by a recognition task which tested whether knowledge of the rhythm generalized to novel stimuli. The main findings were: (1) speakers trained on the cross-linguisticallyless common rhythm distinguished between novel stimuli which did or didnot conform to their training rhythm, while speakers trained on the more common rhythm did not;(2) English speakers were biased more strongly than Portuguese speakers against final stress; and (3) melodies that are on a boundary between rhythm categories were treated as less prototypical than other members of the same rhythm category. The results demonstrate that knowledge of complex linguistic rhythms can be generalized after very little training, and that the less common rhythm is easier to learn even though it seems more complex. The results are compared with general-purpose exemplar-based learning models as well as abstract linguistic theories of word stress acquisition.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics,General Medicine

Reference51 articles.

1. Modality independence of implicitly learned grammatical knowledge.

2. Bell, A.( 1977). Accent placement and perception of prominence in rhythmic structures. In L. Hyman (Ed.), Studies in stress and accent: Southern California Occasional Papers in Linguistics,4 ,(pp. 1-13). Los Angeles: Dept.of linguistics, University of Southern California.

3. Stress and Non-Stress Accent

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