Abstract

The ability to perceive lexical stress patterns has been shown to develop in language-specific ways. However, previous studies have examined this ability in languages that are either clearly stress-based (favoring the development of a preference for trochaic stress, like English and German) or syllable-based (favoring the development of no stress preferences, like French, Spanish, and Catalan) and/or where the frequency distributions of stress patterns provide clear data for a predominant pattern (like English and Hebrew). European Portuguese (EP) is a different type of language, which presents conflicting sets of cues related to rhythm, frequency, and stress correlates that challenge existing accounts of early stress perception. Using an anticipatory eye movement (AEM) paradigm implemented with eye-tracking, EP-learning infants at 5–6 months demonstrated sensitivity to the trochaic/iambic stress contrast, with evidence of asymmetrical perception or preference for iambic stress. These results are not predicted by the rhythmic account of developing stress perception, and suggest that the language-particular phonological patterns impacting the frequency of trochaic and iambic stress, beyond lexical words with two or more syllables, together with the prosodic correlates of stress, drive the early acquisition of lexical stress. Our findings provide the first evidence of sensitivity to stress patterns in the presence of segmental variability by 5–6 months, and highlight the importance of testing developing stress perception in languages with diverse combinations of rhythmic, phonological, and phonetic properties.

Highlights

  • Word stress is a prosodic dimension that varies across languages in two important domains

  • Behavioral findings from adult perception have shown that, in the absence of vowel quality cues, European Portuguese (EP) speakers are unable to perceive stress contrasts, demonstrating a stress “deafness” effect similar to that found in speakers of languages with fixed stress or no lexical stress (Correia et al, 2015; Lu et al, 2018)

  • The ability to distinguish stress patterns in the absence of vowel quality cues would indicate that early perception is guided by prosodic cues, not segmental cues, unlike adult perception

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Summary

Introduction

Word stress is a prosodic dimension that varies across languages in two important domains. Similar early stress discrimination abilities in the absence of full segmental variability are shown by infants learning variable stress languages (English, German, Spanish, and Italian) and languages with no lexical stress (French). A different picture emerges when stress discrimination is tested in contexts with segmental variability, which are closer to the phonetic variability found in speech, namely lists of segmentally different words (for example, /ˈdatu/, /ˈnuki/, etc., with trochaic stress, and /datu/, /nuki/, with iambic stress) In these contexts, younger infants have difficulties in discriminating stress patterns, as shown by Italian newborns (Sansavini, 1997) and Spanish and French-learning 6-month-olds (Skoruppa et al, 2013). Infants’ sensitivity to lexical stress contrasts probably reflects the acquisition of the phonological grammar of the native language

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