›› 2019, Vol. ›› Issue (2): 273-279.

• 基础、实验与工效 • 上一篇    下一篇

/n/-/l/音位合并现象的神经机制:来自MMN的证据

吴盈1,郭小涛2,陈香3,王正雪1,高雅4,王晓冬5   

  1. 1. 西南大学
    2. 中国科学技术大学附属第一医院
    3. 重庆医科大学附属儿童医院
    4.
    5. 西南大学心理学部
  • 收稿日期:2018-07-13 修回日期:2018-09-14 出版日期:2019-03-20 发布日期:2019-03-20
  • 通讯作者: 王晓冬

Neural Correlates of /n/-/l/ Phonemic Merger: An MMN Study

  • Received:2018-07-13 Revised:2018-09-14 Online:2019-03-20 Published:2019-03-20

摘要: 采用ERP技术,比较音位合并者与非音位合并者辨别合并音位/n/-/l/的脑电和行为反应。结果发现,非音位合并者在注意前阶段展现了显著的MMN;而音位合并者没有展现MMN,但在晚期展现了一个显著的负波。行为实验发现,相比于音位合并者,非音位合并者在分辨/n/-/l/时正确率更高,反应时更短。这些结果表明:两组被试区分/n/-/l/的能力在早期自动加工阶段就已经有了显著的差异。方言经验可能降低了音位合并者在听觉感觉加工阶段检测合并音位差异的敏感度。

关键词: 音位合并, 失匹配负波, 晚期辨别负波, 事件相关电位

Abstract: Native language experience shapes how people perceive the world at an early age. Phonemic merger is a common phenomenon of language variation in which two phonemes cannot be distinguished in perception and pronunciation. Phonemic merger could indicate a deficit of perceptual sensitivity to non-native phonemic contrasts. For example, merged speakers from southwest China are always not able to distinguish the /n/-/l/ contrast that acoustically mixed in their dialects, whereas people from the north can distinguish them without an effort. A previous study (Conrey et al., 2005) showed that the perception of /I/-/E/ in English differ between merged speakers and unmerged speakers in the LPC response which attributed to the conscious phonological decision processes. However, it has been unclear that whether and how the language experiences of phonemic merger impact merged speakers’ phoneme perception in early auditory processing. Here, we adapted a passive oddball paradigm to examine if the merged experience impact speech recognition and explore the neural correlates of /n/-/l/ Chinese phonemic merger at the early stage of auditory processing, as indexed by the mismatch negativity (MMN). In the ERP experiment, the subjects sat in an acoustically shielded cabin. Acoustic stimuli /niú/ and /liú/ were delivered binaurally via headphones at an intensity of 60 dB SPL. We instructed the subjects ignore the auditory and concentrate on a silent movie. Simultaneously, we recorded the subjects’ brain waves. After EEG recording, all of the subjects participated in an /n/-/l/ discrimination test, in order to measure their capacity of distinguish /n/ from /l/. According to the accuracy of the behavioral test and assessment for dialectal experience, 22 listeners were divided into two groups, merged speakers (4 males, 7 females, age range, 18-25 years) and unmerged speakers (4 males, 7 females, age range, 18-22 years). Then, we compared the ERPs and behavioral performance for the discrimination of /n/-/l/ contrast between merged speakers and unmerged speakers. The results showed that the behavioral responses were slower (p = .003) and more error-prone (p < .001) in the merged speakers than in the unmerged speakers. These behavioral results indicate merged speakers’ deficit of discrimination of /n/-/l/ contrast. Our ERP results revealed that the deviant syllable /liú/ evoked a typical MMN only in unmerged speakers with a maximum amplitude peaked around 182 ms after the onset of the critical phoneme. The absence of MMN suggested that the /n/-/l/ merged speakers had lost the ability to distinguish the phonemes /n/ and /l/ in early auditory processing. Although failed to observe the MMN component in merged speakers on the MMN time window, we obtained a late discriminatory negativity (LDN) in 480~540 ms. For the precise function of LDN, more further studies are needed. The significant differences of ERP responses between two groups indicated that the merged speakers are deficient in recognizing the contrast between /n/-/l/ at least in the acoustic perceptual processing. In conclusion, our results indicate that long-term experience of phonemic merger affects merged speakers’ speech perception, and merged speakers lost the automatic discrimination of merged contrast at an early stage of auditory processing.

Key words: phonemic merger, mismatch negativity, late discriminatory negativity, event-related potentials