Navigating conflicting phonotactic constraints in bilingual speech perception

Word-initial /s/-consonant clusters do not occur in Spanish. Confronted with such sequences (e.g., in loanwords), Spanish speakers tend to perceive an illusory initial /e/, ‘repairing’ the illicit sequence. In two experiments, both conducted in Spanish with Spanish-sounding nonwords, we ask whether...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bilingualism (Cambridge, England) England), 2016-11, Vol.19 (5), p.939-954
Hauptverfasser: CARLSON, MATTHEW T., GOLDRICK, MATTHEW, BLASINGAME, MICHAEL, FINK, ANGELA
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GOLDRICK, MATTHEW
BLASINGAME, MICHAEL
FINK, ANGELA
description Word-initial /s/-consonant clusters do not occur in Spanish. Confronted with such sequences (e.g., in loanwords), Spanish speakers tend to perceive an illusory initial /e/, ‘repairing’ the illicit sequence. In two experiments, both conducted in Spanish with Spanish-sounding nonwords, we ask whether knowledge of English, which has no restriction against this sound sequence, weakens this pattern of perceptual repair in fluent Spanish–English bilinguals, and whether the effects of English depend on language dominance. In both identification and discrimination tasks, bilinguals exhibited weaker perceptual repair effects relative to Spanish monolinguals. This was true even for bilinguals dominant in Spanish, though the weakening was more pronounced for English-dominant bilinguals. These results show that conflicting phonotactic systems can jointly influence bilinguals’ perceptual repair of the acoustic signal in the more restrictive language, even when it is the bilingual's dominant language, suggesting a degree of integration and mutual influence of knowledge between both their languages.
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subjects Auditory Perception
Bilingualism
Consonant clusters
Consonants
Discrimination tasks
English language
Evidence
French as a second language
Influence
Language
Language dominance
Linguistics
Listening Comprehension
Loanwords
Monolingualism
Phonemes
Phonetics
Phonology
Phonotactics
Questionnaires
Repair
Romance Languages
Second Languages
Sound
Spanish language
Speech
Speech perception
Vowels
Written Language
title Navigating conflicting phonotactic constraints in bilingual speech perception
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