LINGUIST List 32.2923

Wed Sep 15 2021

FYI: Deadline Extension: Special Issue ''Native Speech Perception in the Context of Multilingualism and Language Learning''

Editor for this issue: Everett Green <everettlinguistlist.org>



Date: 14-Sep-2021
From: Olga Dmitrieva <odmitriepurdue.edu>
Subject: Deadline Extension: Special Issue ''Native Speech Perception in the Context of Multilingualism and Language Learning''
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Native Speech Perception in the Context of Multilingualism and Language Learning - Special Issue of ''Languages''

Guest Editors:
Olga Dmitrieva
Chiara Celata
Esther de Leeuw
Natalia Kartushina

https://www.mdpi.com/journal/languages/special_issues/native_speech_perception

The goal of this Special Issue is to bring together current state-of-the-art research examining the effects of additional language or language variety acquisition and use on native language (i.e., first-acquired language) speech perception, including but not limited to the identification of native sound categories, discrimination of native contrasts, and cue weighting in the perception of native sound distinctions.

Previous research has provided a solid body of work on the effects of second language (L2) learning and multilingualism on first language (L1) speech production (Chang 2012, Colantoni et al. 2020, Cook 2003, de Leeuw and Celata 2019, de Leeuw et al. 2010, de Leeuw et al. 2013, Flege 1987, Harada 2003, Kartushina and Martin 2019, Kartushina et al. 2016, Law et al. 2019, Mayr et al. 2021, Mennen 2004, Nodari et al. 2019, Sancier 1997, and Schmid et al. 2004, among others). The results have indicated that bi-/multilinguals’ native sound production often differs from monolingual norms, frequently demonstrating partial convergence with, and at times divergence from, the comparable sound categories in the additional language(s) spoken by the individuals. These effects have been found for early and late bilinguals, advanced and novice learners, and immersed and home-country-based learners. In this issue, we focus on equivalent effects, but in the perceptual domain.

Initial evidence suggests that multilingual listeners exhibit language-specific patterns in perception, or “language modes” (Antoniou et al. 2012, Gonzales and Lotto 2013, Grosjean 2001). Moreover, first language speech perception can diverge from the monolingual norms due to the effects of additional languages (Chang 2016, Celata and Cancila 2010, Dmitrieva et al. 2020, Dmitrieva 2019, Garcia-Sierra et al. 2009, Law et al. 2019, Llanos et al. 2013). Nevertheless, much remains to be learned about native speech perception in the context of multilingualism, including the following questions:

Who is likely to exhibit second/additional language effects on native speech perception?

In what context/conditions of language acquisition are such effects more likely to arise?

What perceptual domains or perceptual tasks tend to reveal interference from additional languages or language varieties?

How do changes in L1 perception and production, driven by the acquisition and/or use of additional languages, connect and interact with each other?

What theoretical and cognitive models can explain L2 effects on L1 perception?

We welcome contributions exploring these and other questions relating to first language speech perception using a variety of methodologies and in a variety of multilingual populations, including bi-/multilingual children and adults, adult language learners in immersed and in classroom settings, heritage speakers, bidialectal speakers, and others. We especially encourage submissions examining under-researched languages and dialects and their combinations.

We request that, prior to submitting a manuscript, interested authors initially submit a preliminary title and an abstract of 400–600 words summarizing their intended contribution. Please send this to the corresponding guest editor (Olga Dmitrieva, odmitriepurdue.edu) and to the Languages editorial office (languagesmdpi.com). Abstracts will be reviewed by the guest editors for the purposes of ensuring proper fit within the scope of the Special Issue. Full manuscripts will undergo double-blind peer-review.

The tentative completion schedule:

Abstract submission deadline: 15 October 2021
Notification of abstract acceptance: 15 November 2021
Full manuscript deadline: 15 May 2022

Linguistic Field(s): Language Acquisition; Phonetics; Phonology; Psycholinguistics; Sociolinguistics


Page Updated: 15-Sep-2021