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Turning an L1 three-way contrast into an L2 two-way contrast Paola Escudero University of Utrecht and McGill University Paul Boersma University of Amsterdam Second International Conference on Contrast in Phonology Toronto, May 3, 2002
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Introduction Learning an L2 two-way contrast is problematic if it has an L1 three-way contrast as a starting point. The initial state of L2 speech comprehension provides evidence of an intermediate perceptual level. The perception of L2 learners improves during development. L2 perceptual development need not affect L1 performance.
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Case: the perception of front vowels by Dutch learners of Spanish
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L1 and L2 production environments Dutch Spanish
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Foreign-language perception
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Transfer for beginners in identification L1 L2
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Evidence for an intermediate discrete perception level target-language /i/ associated with L1 /i/ target-language /e/ identified with L1 / / (/ I / |i|: identification task reflects recognition)
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L1 and L2 production environments Dutch Spanish
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L2 perception improves
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L1 perception stays good
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Perception modes The model requires that L2 boundaries can shift without affecting L1 perception. Therefore, we must assume separate perception grammars for L1 and L2 within every single speaker. Is there independent evidence for such a distinction? Set up the two alleged modes by language-dependent priming, then compare L1 classification in the two modes.
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Beginning Dutch learners of Spanish Mode: Dutch Spanish
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Intermediate Dutch learners of Spanish Mode: Dutch Spanish
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Advanced Dutch learners of Spanish Mode: Dutch Spanish
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Bilingual Dutch-Spanish Mode: Dutch Spanish
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Formalization: OT constraints “an F1 of 200 Hz is not /a/” “an F1 of 200 Hz is not / E /” “an F1 of 200 Hz is not / I /” “an F1 of 200 Hz is not /i/” “an F1 of 450 Hz is not /a/” “an F1 of 1000 Hz is not /a/” ...
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How OT handles perception [450 Hz]450 Hz not / A / 450 Hz not / i / 450 Hz not / I / 450 Hz not / E / / A / *! /E//E/ * /I/ /I/ /i/*!
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L1 perception if there’s a lexicon Recognition phase undoes misperceptions.
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How recognition mismatches change the rankings in the perception grammar [450 Hz] | I | 450 Hz not / A / 450 Hz not / i / 450 Hz not / I / 450 Hz not / E / / A / *! /E//E/ ** /I//I/ *! /i/*!
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L1 computer simulation Initial state: all constraints ranked equally high. Learner hears 1000 tokens/month, drawn from the Dutch F1 distribution. Learner is also told (by recognition) which was the correct category. Stochastic OT, evaluation noise 2.0. Plasticity (size of the learning steps): starts at 10.0 (much larger than the evaluation noise); decreases by 3% every month; ends at 0.014 after 18 years. First fast, then accurate.
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Dutch production environment (short front vowels and / /)
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Final L1 state
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L2 computer simulation Initial state: final state of L1. Learner hears 500 tokens/month, drawn from the Spanish F1 distribution. Learner is also told (by recognition) which was the correct category (/ A /, / E /, /i/; never / I /). Stochastic OT, evaluation noise 2.0. Plasticity (size of the learning steps): stays constant at 0.01 slow but accurate.
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Initial L2 state (full transfer)
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Conclusions The transfer of an L1 3-way contrast is problematic if the TL has a 2-way contrast. There’s a perceptual level with discrete categories. Learners improve their L2 perception (full access) without affecting their L1 performance (separate perception modes). For the time being, the only linguistic framework that models this is OT with GLA.
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Opposite claims ‘L2 perception can hardly be learned’ (Pallier, Bosch & Sebastián-Gallés 1997)
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Not in Pallier’s article… The individual data show a bimodal distribution that was averaged
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Pallier’s data actually confirm that L2 learners can become proficient
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Opposite claims There is only one perception mode: L1 (Pallier, Bosch & Sebastián-Gallés 1997)
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Not in Pallier’s article… The individual data confirm two modes
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Pallier’s data actually confirm the two perception modes
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Conclusions still valid... The transfer of an L1 3-way contrast is problematic if the TL has a 2-way contrast. There’s a perceptual level with discrete categories. Learners improve their L2 perception (full access) without affecting their L1 performance (separate perception modes). For the time being, the only linguistic framework that models this is OT with GLA.
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Dank u voor uw aandacht! Gracias por su atención! Thank you for your attention!
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