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Infants’ sensitivity to nonadjacent vowel dependencies

  • Vowel harmony is a linguistic phenomenon whereby vowels within a word share one or several of their phonological features, constituting a nonadjacent, and thus challenging, dependency to learn. It can be found in a large number of agglutinating languages, such as Hungarian and Turkish, and it may apply both at the lexical level (i.e., within word stems) and at the morphological level (i.e., between stems and their affixes). Thus, it might affect both lexical and morphological development in infants whose native language has vowel harmony. The current study asked at what age infants learning an irregular harmonic language, Hungarian, become sensitive to vowel harmony within word stems. In a head-turn preference study, 13-month-old, but not 10-month-old, Hungarian-learning infants preferred listening to nonharmonic VCV (vowel-consonant-vowel) pseudowords over vowel harmonic ones. A control experiment with 13-month-olds exposed to French, a nonharmonic language, showed no listening preference for either of the sequences, suggesting thatVowel harmony is a linguistic phenomenon whereby vowels within a word share one or several of their phonological features, constituting a nonadjacent, and thus challenging, dependency to learn. It can be found in a large number of agglutinating languages, such as Hungarian and Turkish, and it may apply both at the lexical level (i.e., within word stems) and at the morphological level (i.e., between stems and their affixes). Thus, it might affect both lexical and morphological development in infants whose native language has vowel harmony. The current study asked at what age infants learning an irregular harmonic language, Hungarian, become sensitive to vowel harmony within word stems. In a head-turn preference study, 13-month-old, but not 10-month-old, Hungarian-learning infants preferred listening to nonharmonic VCV (vowel-consonant-vowel) pseudowords over vowel harmonic ones. A control experiment with 13-month-olds exposed to French, a nonharmonic language, showed no listening preference for either of the sequences, suggesting that this finding cannot be explained by a universal preference for nonharmonic sequences but rather reflects language-specific knowledge emerging between 10 and 13 months of age. We discuss the implications of this finding for morphological and lexical learning. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier Inc.show moreshow less

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Metadaten
Author details:Nayeli Gonzalez-Gomez, Silvana Schmandt, Judit FazekasORCiD, Thierry NazziORCiD, Judit GervainORCiD
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2018.08.014
ISSN:0022-0965
ISSN:1096-0457
Pubmed ID:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30380456
Title of parent work (English):Journal of experimental child psychology
Subtitle (English):the case of vowel harmony in Hungarian
Publisher:Elsevier
Place of publishing:New York
Publication type:Article
Language:English
Date of first publication:2018/10/28
Publication year:2018
Release date:2021/04/15
Tag:Early language acquisition; French; Hungarian; Nonadjacent phonological dependencies; Speech perception; Vowel harmony
Volume:178
Number of pages:14
First page:170
Last Page:183
Funding institution:Labex Empirical Foundations of Linguistics (EFL) Grant [ANR-10-LABX-0083]; Fyssen Foundation Startup grant; Emergence(s) program grant of the City of Paris; [ANR-13-BSH2-0004]; [ANR-16-FRAL-0007]; [ANR-15-CE37-0009-01]
Organizational units:Humanwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften / Department Linguistik
4 Sprache / 41 Linguistik / 414 Phonologie, Phonetik
Peer review:Referiert
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