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Katerelos, Marina; Poulin-Dubois, Diane; Oshima-Takane, Yuriko – Infancy, 2011
This study was designed to examine whether infants acquiring languages that place a differential emphasis on nouns and verbs, focus their attention on motions or objects in the presence of a novel word. An infant-controlled habituation paradigm was used to teach 18- to 20-month-old English-, French-, and Japanese-speaking infants' novel words for…
Descriptors: Infants, English, French, Japanese
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Sato, Yutaka; Sogabe, Yuko; Mazuka, Reiko – Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2010
Infants' speech perception abilities change through the first year of life, from broad sensitivity to a wide range of speech contrasts to becoming more finely attuned to their native language. What remains unclear, however, is how this perceptual change relates to brain responses to native language contrasts in terms of the functional…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Infants, Auditory Perception, Foreign Countries
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Sato, Yutaka; Sogabe, Yuko; Mazuka, Reiko – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Japanese has a vowel duration contrast as one component of its language-specific phonemic repertory to distinguish word meanings. It is not clear, however, how a sensitivity to vowel duration can develop in a linguistic context. In the present study, using the visual habituation-dishabituation method, the authors evaluated infants' abilities to…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Vowels, Phonemics, Infants