Module 02 - Des sons à profusion - Comment la perception categorielle des sons se produit-elle ?
Charlotte Alazard évoque les langues à clics parlées dans le sud de l’Afrique. Les phonèmes produits peuvent être interprétés comme des bruits environnementaux. Si vous voulez en avoir une idée :
Bibliographie
Kuhl, P. K. (1991). Human adults and human infants show a “perceptual magnet effect” for the prototypes of speech categories, monkeys do not. Perception & psychophysics, 50(2), 93-107
Kuhl, P. K. (1998). Language, culture and intersubjectivity: The creation of shared perception. Intersubjective communication and emotion in early ontogeny, 3, 297-315
Kuhl, P. K. Stevens, E., Hayashi, A., Deguchi, T., Kiritani, S., & Iverson, P. (2006). Infants show a facilitation effect for native language phonetic perception between 6 and 12 months. Developmental science, 9(2), F13-F21
Best, C. T., McRoberts, G. W., & Sithole, N. N. (1988). The phonological basis of perceptual loss for non-native contrasts: Maintenance of discrimination among Zulu clicks by English-speaking adults and infants. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 14(3), 345-360
Best, C. T., & Strange, W. (1992). Effects of phonological and phonetic factors on cross-language perception of approximants. Journal of Phonetics, 20(3), 305-330
Best, C. T., Mc Roberts, G. W., & Goodell, E. (2001). Discrimination of non-native consonant contrasts varying in perceptual assimilation to the listener’s native phonological system. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 109, 775-794