Learning Sound Patterns
Chapter 4: Learning Sound Patterns
4.1 Where Are the Words?
- Probing infants’ knowledge of words
- Method 4.1: The head-turn preference paradigm
- Familiar words break apart the speech stream
- Discovering what words sound like
- Box 4.1: Phonotactic constraints across languages
- 4.1 Questions to Contemplate
4.2 Infant Statisticians
- Tracking transitional probabilities: The information is out there
- Is statistical learning a specialized human skill for language?
- Box 4.2: ERPs reveal statistical skills in newborns
- 4.2 Questions to Contemplate
4.3 What Are the Sounds?
- How many distinct sounds are there in a language?
- A catalogue of sound distinctions
- Language at Large 4.1: The articulatory phonetics of beatboxing
- Phonemes versus allophones: How languages carve up phonetic space
- Box 4.3: Vowels
- What sound distinctions do newborns start with?
- Method 4.2: High-amplitude sucking
- 4.3 Questions to Contemplate
4.4 Learning How Sounds Pattern
- The distribution of allophones
- Box 4.4: Allophones in complementary distribution: Some crosslinguistic examples
- From patterns of distribution to phonemic categories
- 4.4 Questions to Contemplate
4.5 Some Patterns Are Easier to Learn than Others
- Do crosslinguistic tendencies reflect learning biases?
- Evidence for learning biases
- Researchers at Work 4.1: Investigating potential learning biases
- Do language universals influence the perception of sounds?
- 4.5 Questions to Contemplate
- Digging Deeper: How does learning change with age and experience?
© 2019 Oxford University Press