Abstract

This study investigated the developmental trajectories of categorical perception (CP) of segments (i.e., stops) and suprasegments (i.e., lexical tones) in an attempt to examine the perceptual development of phonological categories and whether CP of suprasegments develops in parallel with that of segments. Forty-seven Mandarin-speaking monolingual preschoolers aged four to six years old, and fourteen adults completed both identification and discrimination tasks of the Tone 1-2 continuum and the /pa/-/pha/ continuum. Results revealed that children could perceive both lexical tones and aspiration of stops in a categorical manner by age four. The boundary position did not depend on age, with children having similar positions to adults regardless of speech continuum types. The boundary width, on the other hand, reached the adult-like level at age six for lexical tones, but not for stops. In addition, the within-category discrimination score did not differ significantly between children and adults for both continua. The between-category discrimination score improved with age and achieved the adult-like level at age five for lexical tones, but still not for stops even at age six. It suggests that the fine-grained perception of phonological categories is a protracted process, and the improvement and varying timeline of the development of segments and suprasegments are discussed in relation to statistical learning of the regularities of speech sounds in ambient language, ongoing maturation of perceptual systems, the memory mechanism underlying perceptual learning, and the intrinsic nature of speech elements.

Highlights

  • The development of phonological categories is a complex and long process

  • The present study exploited the paradigm of categorical perception (CP), a fine-grained perceptual method, to investigate the perceptual development of phonological categories of both segments and suprasegments in children aged four to six years old

  • We investigated whether the age at which CP in children reached an adult-like level might vary as a function of different speech elements, and we expected that children would show adult-like performance in CP of lexical tones earlier than that of stops

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Summary

Introduction

The development of phonological categories is a complex and long process. Relevant phonological categories in native language are perceived with increasing sensitivity and precision until childhood and even adolescence (Elliott et al, 1981; Hazan and Barrett, 2000; Medina et al, 2010; Ma et al, 2017). Perception of Segments and Suprasegments irrelevant phonetic variations of the same phoneme accessing their mental lexicon. It boosts the efficiency of word recognition and spoken communication. The present study exploited the paradigm of categorical perception (CP), a fine-grained perceptual method, to investigate the perceptual development of phonological categories of both segments and suprasegments in children aged four to six years old. Categorical Perception as a Fine-Grained Perceptual Method

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