Abstract

This study investigates whether listeners’ experience with a second language learned later in life affects their use of fundamental frequency (F0) as a cue to word boundaries in the segmentation of an artificial language (AL), particularly when the cues to word boundaries conflict between the first language (L1) and second language (L2). F0 signals phrase-final (and thus word-final) boundaries in French but word-initial boundaries in English. Participants were functionally monolingual French listeners, functionally monolingual English listeners, bilingual L1-English L2-French listeners, and bilingual L1-French L2-English listeners. They completed the AL-segmentation task with F0 signaling word-final boundaries or without prosodic cues to word boundaries (monolingual groups only). After listening to the AL, participants completed a forced-choice word-identification task in which the foils were either non-words or part-words. The results show that the monolingual French listeners, but not the monolingual English listeners, performed better in the presence of F0 cues than in the absence of such cues. Moreover, bilingual status modulated listeners’ use of F0 cues to word-final boundaries, with bilingual French listeners performing less accurately than monolingual French listeners on both word types but with bilingual English listeners performing more accurately than monolingual English listeners on non-words. These findings not only confirm that speech segmentation is modulated by the L1, but also newly demonstrate that listeners’ experience with the L2 (French or English) affects their use of F0 cues in speech segmentation. This suggests that listeners’ use of prosodic cues to word boundaries is adaptive and non-selective, and can change as a function of language experience.

Highlights

  • Research has shown that upon hearing an unfamiliar language, listeners use all the cues that are reliable predictors of word boundaries in their native language (L1) to segment the unfamiliar language into individual words [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]

  • This study first examined whether functionally monolingual French listeners and functionally monolingual English listeners differ in their ability to segment an artificial language (AL) that contained or did not contain F0 cues to word-final boundaries

  • The results showed that only monolingual French listeners benefited from F0 cues to word-final boundaries in their segmentation of the AL, to the extent that their performance in the condition with F0 cues was significantly above chance for both trials with non-word foils and trials with part-word foils

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Summary

Introduction

Research has shown that upon hearing an unfamiliar language, listeners use all the cues that are reliable predictors of word boundaries in their native language (L1) to segment the unfamiliar language into individual words [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. Finding that L1-French L2-English listeners are less successful than monolingual French listeners at using F0 cues to word-final boundaries would suggest that listeners’ use of segmentation strategies is non-selective: When listeners have knowledge of two segmentation strategies that conflict in how they track word boundaries in different languages (e.g., F0 rise as a cue to word-initial boundaries in English but word-final boundaries in French), they do not select which segmentation strategy to adopt as a function of how useful this strategy would be to segment the AL; instead, they are less accurate in using either strategy (as opposed to selecting the segmentation strategy that would work for segmenting the AL, here the French strategy). The present study includes both types of foils in order to assess how listeners’ experience with an L2 modulates their ability to extract both the probabilities of co-occurrence of two syllables and the conditional probabilities of successive syllables when segmenting an AL into units

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