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Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study

BACKGROUND: Tone languages such as Thai and Mandarin Chinese use differences in fundamental frequency (F(0), pitch) to distinguish lexical meaning. Previous behavioral studies have shown that native speakers of a non-tone language have difficulty discriminating among tone contrasts and are sensitive...

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Autores principales: Kaan, Edith, Barkley, Christopher M, Bao, Mingzhen, Wayland, Ratree
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2483720/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18573210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-9-53
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author Kaan, Edith
Barkley, Christopher M
Bao, Mingzhen
Wayland, Ratree
author_facet Kaan, Edith
Barkley, Christopher M
Bao, Mingzhen
Wayland, Ratree
author_sort Kaan, Edith
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Tone languages such as Thai and Mandarin Chinese use differences in fundamental frequency (F(0), pitch) to distinguish lexical meaning. Previous behavioral studies have shown that native speakers of a non-tone language have difficulty discriminating among tone contrasts and are sensitive to different F(0 )dimensions than speakers of a tone language. The aim of the present ERP study was to investigate the effect of language background and training on the non-attentive processing of lexical tones. EEG was recorded from 12 adult native speakers of Mandarin Chinese, 12 native speakers of American English, and 11 Thai speakers while they were watching a movie and were presented with multiple tokens of low-falling, mid-level and high-rising Thai lexical tones. High-rising or low-falling tokens were presented as deviants among mid-level standard tokens, and vice versa. EEG data and data from a behavioral discrimination task were collected before and after a two-day perceptual categorization training task. RESULTS: Behavioral discrimination improved after training in both the Chinese and the English groups. Low-falling tone deviants versus standards elicited a mismatch negativity (MMN) in all language groups. Before, but not after training, the English speakers showed a larger MMN compared to the Chinese, even though English speakers performed worst in the behavioral tasks. The MMN was followed by a late negativity, which became smaller with improved discrimination. The High-rising deviants versus standards elicited a late negativity, which was left-lateralized only in the English and Chinese groups. CONCLUSION: Results showed that native speakers of English, Chinese and Thai recruited largely similar mechanisms when non-attentively processing Thai lexical tones. However, native Thai speakers differed from the Chinese and English speakers with respect to the processing of late F(0 )contour differences (high-rising versus mid-level tones). In addition, native speakers of a non-tone language (English) were initially more sensitive to F(0 )onset differences (low-falling versus mid-level contrast), which was suppressed as a result of training. This result converges with results from previous behavioral studies and supports the view that attentive as well as non-attentive processing of F(0 )contrasts is affected by language background, but is malleable even in adult learners.
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spelling pubmed-24837202008-07-25 Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study Kaan, Edith Barkley, Christopher M Bao, Mingzhen Wayland, Ratree BMC Neurosci Research Article BACKGROUND: Tone languages such as Thai and Mandarin Chinese use differences in fundamental frequency (F(0), pitch) to distinguish lexical meaning. Previous behavioral studies have shown that native speakers of a non-tone language have difficulty discriminating among tone contrasts and are sensitive to different F(0 )dimensions than speakers of a tone language. The aim of the present ERP study was to investigate the effect of language background and training on the non-attentive processing of lexical tones. EEG was recorded from 12 adult native speakers of Mandarin Chinese, 12 native speakers of American English, and 11 Thai speakers while they were watching a movie and were presented with multiple tokens of low-falling, mid-level and high-rising Thai lexical tones. High-rising or low-falling tokens were presented as deviants among mid-level standard tokens, and vice versa. EEG data and data from a behavioral discrimination task were collected before and after a two-day perceptual categorization training task. RESULTS: Behavioral discrimination improved after training in both the Chinese and the English groups. Low-falling tone deviants versus standards elicited a mismatch negativity (MMN) in all language groups. Before, but not after training, the English speakers showed a larger MMN compared to the Chinese, even though English speakers performed worst in the behavioral tasks. The MMN was followed by a late negativity, which became smaller with improved discrimination. The High-rising deviants versus standards elicited a late negativity, which was left-lateralized only in the English and Chinese groups. CONCLUSION: Results showed that native speakers of English, Chinese and Thai recruited largely similar mechanisms when non-attentively processing Thai lexical tones. However, native Thai speakers differed from the Chinese and English speakers with respect to the processing of late F(0 )contour differences (high-rising versus mid-level tones). In addition, native speakers of a non-tone language (English) were initially more sensitive to F(0 )onset differences (low-falling versus mid-level contrast), which was suppressed as a result of training. This result converges with results from previous behavioral studies and supports the view that attentive as well as non-attentive processing of F(0 )contrasts is affected by language background, but is malleable even in adult learners. BioMed Central 2008-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2483720/ /pubmed/18573210 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-9-53 Text en Copyright © 2008 Kaan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kaan, Edith
Barkley, Christopher M
Bao, Mingzhen
Wayland, Ratree
Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study
title Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study
title_full Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study
title_fullStr Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study
title_full_unstemmed Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study
title_short Thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of Thai, English and Mandarin Chinese: An event-related potentials training study
title_sort thai lexical tone perception in native speakers of thai, english and mandarin chinese: an event-related potentials training study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2483720/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18573210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-9-53
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