Abstract

Perceptual narrowing is a highly significant development associated with the first year of life. It conventionally refers to an orientation toward nativeness whereby infant's perceptual sensitivities begin to align with the phonetic properties of their native environment. Nativeness effects, such as perceptual narrowing, have been observed in several domains, most notably, in face discrimination within other-race faces and speech discrimination of non-native phonemes. Thus, far, nativeness effects in the face and speech perception have been theoretically linked, but have mostly been investigated independently. An important caveat to nativeness effects is that diversifying experiences, such as bilingualism or multiracial exposure, can lead to a reduction or postponement in attunement to the native environment. The present study was designed to investigate whether bilingualism influences nativeness effects in phonetic and face perception. Eleven-month-old monolingual and bilingual infants were tested on their abilities to discriminate native and non-native speech contrasts as well as own-race and other-race face contrasts. While monolingual infants demonstrated nativeness effects in face and speech perception, bilingual infants demonstrated nativeness effects in the face perception but demonstrated flexibility in speech perception. Results support domain-specific effects of bilingual experience on nativeness effects.

Highlights

  • One of the most widely documented hallmarks of infant psychological development is perceptual narrowing

  • Monolingual and bilingual infants were compared on their habituation profiles and they did not differ in terms of habituation times, trials to habituation, duration of first habituation trial or duration of last habituation trial

  • Differences in looking time to control and test trials were marginally greater for bilingual infants than monolingual infants [t(15) = 1.89, p = 0.06, Cohen’s d: 0.34]

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most widely documented hallmarks of infant psychological development is perceptual narrowing. Construed, this refers to a nativeness effect whereby infants’ perceptual systems attune to environmentally relevant details. Two domains that have been the focus of intensive empirical research on nativeness effects are face perception and speech perception. In both domains, nativeness effects, such as perceptual narrowing, are potentially modified by diversifying experiences. Recent research with bilingual infants demonstrates that narrowing may be attenuated by bilingual exposure (GarciaSierra et al, 2011; Petitto et al, 2012; Graf-Estes and Hay, 2015; Ferjan-Ramirez et al, 2017).

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