Abstract

Over the course of development, speech sounds that are contrastive in one's native language tend to become perceived categorically: that is, listeners are unaware of variation within phonetic categories while showing excellent sensitivity to speech sounds that span linguistically meaningful phonetic category boundaries. The end stage of this developmental process is that the perceptual systems that handle acoustic-phonetic information show special tuning to native language contrasts, and as such, category-level information appears to be present at even fairly low levels of the neural processing stream. Research on adults acquiring non-native speech categories offers an avenue for investigating the interplay of category-level information and perceptual sensitivities to these sounds as speech categories emerge. In particular, one can observe the neural changes that unfold as listeners learn not only to perceive acoustic distinctions that mark non-native speech sound contrasts, but also to map these distinctions onto category-level representations. An emergent literature on the neural basis of novel and non-native speech sound learning offers new insight into this question. In this review, I will examine this literature in order to answer two key questions. First, where in the neural pathway does sensitivity to category-level phonetic information first emerge over the trajectory of speech sound learning? Second, how do frontal and temporal brain areas work in concert over the course of non-native speech sound learning? Finally, in the context of this literature I will describe a model of speech sound learning in which rapidly-adapting access to categorical information in the frontal lobes modulates the sensitivity of stable, slowly-adapting responses in the temporal lobes.

Highlights

  • Phonetic categories, the basic perceptual units of language, are defined over distributions in acoustic space

  • For any phonetic category (e.g., /d/) there will be a range of acoustic tokens that will all be computed as acceptable members of a given phonetic category

  • The process of learning phonetic categories requires that the listener learn the boundaries of this acoustic space in order to understand how any given acoustic token maps to the phonology of his/her native language

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Summary

Introduction

The basic perceptual units of language, are defined over distributions in acoustic space. This gradient response reflects the non-uniform structure of phonetic categories, suggesting that the temporal lobes are tuned to the internal perceptual structure of native-language categories, and are not merely sensitive to all speech sound dimensions.

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