Abstract

Some people who attempt to learn a second language in adulthood meet with greater success than others. The causes driving these individual differences in second language learning skill continue to be debated. In particular, it remains controversial whether robust auditory perception can provide an advantage for non-native speech perception. Here, we tested English speech perception in native Japanese speakers through the use of frequency following responses, the evoked gamma band response, and behavioral measurements. Participants whose neural responses featured less timing jitter from trial to trial performed better on perception of English consonants than participants with more variable neural timing. Moreover, this neural metric predicted consonant perception to a greater extent than did age of arrival and length of residence in the UK, and neural jitter predicted independent variance in consonant perception after these demographic variables were accounted for. Thus, difficulties with auditory perception may be one source of problems learning second languages in adulthood.

Highlights

  • Speaking and understanding a second language is a vital skill in an increasingly globalized world

  • The correlation between phase-locking at F0 and consonant perception was significantly greater than the correlation with vowel perception (T 1⁄4 2.76, p 1⁄4 .011); the correlation between gamma phase-locking and consonant performance was significantly greater than the correlation with vowel perception (T 1⁄4 2.95, p 1⁄4 .007)

  • We examined English speech perception and neural sound encoding in twenty-five native speakers of Japanese who moved to the United Kingdom as adults

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Summary

Introduction

Speaking and understanding a second language is a vital skill in an increasingly globalized world. One possible source of difficulties with non-native speech perception, is imprecise auditory perception Supporting this theory, individual differences in nonnative speech perception have been linked to non-verbal auditory perception skills, including amplitude envelope discrimination (Kempe et al, 2012), frequency discrimination (Lengeris & Hazan, 2010), pitch perception (Perrachione et al, 2011; Wong & Perrachione, 2007), and spectral discrimination (Kempe, Bublitz, & Brooks, 2015). We examine the link between non-native speech sound perception and auditory processing in Japanese adults learning English as a second language using frequencyfollowing responses (FFRs), an electrophysiological response which reproduces the frequencies present in the evoking sound and reflects early auditory processing in the brainstem and cortex (Coffey, Herholz, Chepesiuk, Baillet, & Zatorre, 2016). Given that impaired gamma-rate phase-locking has been shown to characterize children with language impairment (Heim, Friedman, Keil, & Benasich, 2011), we investigated relationships between gamma phase-locking and nonnative speech perception

Participants
Behavioral measures
Electrophysiology
Results
Discussion
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