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The presence of a foreign accent introduces lexical integration difficulties during late semantic processing

Version 3 2021-10-22, 10:20
Version 2 2021-10-19, 16:00
Version 1 2021-03-30, 18:30
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posted on 2021-10-22, 10:20 authored by Leah Gosselin, Clara D. Martin, Eugenia Navarra-Barindelli, Sendy Caffarra

Previous research suggests that native listeners may be more tolerant to syntactic errors when they are produced in a foreign accent. However, studies investigating this topic within the semantic domain remain conflicting. The current study examined the effects of mispronunciations leading to semantic abnormality in foreign-accented speech. While their EEG was recorded, native speakers of Spanish listened to semantically correct and incorrect sentences produced by another native speaker and a native speaker of Chinese. The anomaly in the incorrect sentences was caused by a subtle mispronunciation (typical or atypical in Chinese-accented Spanish) during a critical word production. While initial-stage semantic processing yielded no accent-specific differences, late processing revealed a persistent N400-effect in the foreign-accent but not in the native-accent. These findings suggest that foreign-accented mispronunciations are more difficult to integrate than native-accented errors, regardless of their relative typicality. The distinction between syntactic and semantic processing of foreign-accented speech is discussed.

Funding

This international collaboration was made possible by a Globalink Research Award Abroad (MITACS), as well as a CGS-M scholarship (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada) conferred to the first author. The research was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad] (SEV-2015-490 to the BCBL; PSI2017-82941-P to C.D.M.), the Basque government [Eusko Jaurlaritza] (PIBA18_29 to C.D.M.), and the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 837228 to S.C. and No 819093 to C. D. M.), and by MINECO predoctoral grants from the Spanish goverment (BES-2016-078896 to E.N.B).

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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