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Sensitivity to Race in Language Comprehension in Monolingual and Bilingual Infants

Overview
Specialties Pediatrics
Psychology
Date 2020 Jul 31
PMID 32731045
Citations 1
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Abstract

Past studies suggest that monolingual and bilingual infants respond differently to race information in face discrimination and social learning tasks. In particular, bilingual infants have been shown to respond more similarly to own- and other-race individuals, in contrast to monolingual infants, who respond preferentially to own-race individuals. In the current study, we investigated monolingual and bilingual sensitivity to speaker race in spoken word recognition. Two-year-old infants were presented with spoken words in association with visual targets. Words were presented in association with own- or other-race actors and were either correctly pronounced or mispronounced. Measuring speech-responsive eye movements to visual targets, we analyzed fixation to visual targets for correct and mispronounced words in relation to speaker race for each group. When presented with own-race speakers, both monolingual and bilingual infants associated correctly pronounced labels, but not mispronounced labels, with visual targets. When presented with other-race speakers, bilingual infants responded similarly. In contrast, monolingual infants did not fixate visual targets regardless of whether words were correctly pronounced or mispronounced by an other-race speaker. Results are discussed in terms of the sensitivities of bilingual and monolingual infants to novelty, learned associations between race and language, and prior social experiences.

Citing Articles

Does race impact speech perception? An account of accented speech in two different multilingual locales.

Kutlu E, Tiv M, Wulff S, Titone D Cogn Res Princ Implic. 2022; 7(1):7.

PMID: 35089448 PMC: 8799814. DOI: 10.1186/s41235-022-00354-0.