@article{BartelsDarcy2009, author = {Bartels, Sonja and Darcy, Isabelle}, title = {Schwa syllables facilitate word segmentation for 9-month-old German-learning infants}, isbn = {978-1-574- 73094-4}, year = {2009}, language = {en} } @article{DarcyKrueger2012, author = {Darcy, Isabelle and Kr{\"u}ger, Franziska}, title = {Vowel perception and production in Turkish children acquiring L2 German}, series = {Journal of phonetics}, volume = {40}, journal = {Journal of phonetics}, number = {4}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {London}, issn = {0095-4470}, doi = {10.1016/j.wocn.2012.05.001}, pages = {568 -- 581}, year = {2012}, abstract = {First language (L1) phonological categories strongly influence late learners' perception and production of second language (L2) categories. For learners who start learning an L2 early in life ("early learners"), this L1 influence appears to be substantially reduced or at least more variable. In this paper, we examine the age at which L1 vowel categories influence the acquisition of L2 vowels. We tested a child population with a very narrow range of age of first exposure, controlling for the use of L1 vs. L2, and various naturally produced contrasts that are not allophonic in the L1 of the children. An oddity discrimination task provided evidence that children who are native speakers of Turkish and began learning German as an L2 in kindergarten categorized difficult German contrasts differently from age-matched native speakers. Their vowel productions of these same contrasts (un-cued object naming) were mostly target-like.}, language = {en} }