When encountering speakers whose accents differ from the listener's own, listeners initially show a processing cost, but that cost can be attenuated after short term exposure. The extent to which processing foreign accents (L2-accents) and within-language accents (L1-accents) is similar is still an open question. This study considers whether listeners' expectations about the source of a speaker's accent-whether the speaker is purported to be an L1 or an L2 speaker-affect intelligibility. Prior work has indirectly manipulated expectations about a speaker's accent through photographs, but the present study primes listeners with a description of the speaker's accent itself. In experiment 1, native English listeners transcribed Spanish-accented English sentences in noise under three different conditions (speaker's accent: monolingual L1 Latinx English, L1-Spanish/L2-English, no information given). Results indicate that, by the end of the experiment, listeners given some information about the accent outperformed listeners given no information, and listeners told the speaker was L1-accented outperformed listeners told to expect L2-accented speech. Findings are interpreted in terms of listeners' expectations about task difficulty, and a follow-up experiment (experiment 2) found that priming listeners to expect that their ability to understand L2-accented speech can improve does in fact improve intelligibility.
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Nat Commun
January 2025
Section of Islet Cell and Regenerative Biology, Joslin Diabetes Center; Department of Medicine, BIDMC; Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
N-methyladenosine (mA) is among the most abundant mRNA modifications, yet its cell-type-specific regulatory roles remain unclear. Here we show that mA methyltransferase-like 14 (METTL14) differentially regulates transcriptome in brown versus white adipose tissue (BAT and WAT), leading to divergent metabolic outcomes. In humans and mice with insulin resistance, METTL14 expression differs significantly from BAT and WAT in the context of its correlation with insulin sensitivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
December 2024
Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United States.
This study investigates the acquisition of sentence focus in Russian by adult English-Russian bilinguals, while paying special attention to the relative contribution of constituent order and prosodic expression. It aims to understand how these factors influence perceived word-level prominence and focus assignment during listening. We present results of two listening tasks designed to examine the influence of pitch cues and constituent order on perceived word prominence (Experiment 1) and focus assignment (Experiment 2) during the auditory comprehension of SV[O] and OV[S] sentences in Russian.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancers (Basel)
December 2024
Medical Oncology, Vall d'Hebron University Hospital, 08035 Barcelona, Spain.
Background: For patients with refractory metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), trifluridine/tipiracil (FTD-TPI) has been associated with a significant improvement in overall survival (OS). However, data are lacking regarding the activity of FTD-TPI in patients with -mutated mCRC.
Methods: This retrospective, multicenter, international cohort included patients with -mutated mCRC treated with FTD-TPI in a real-life setting in Spain and Italy.
Evol Hum Sci
November 2024
Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, Fitzwilliam St, Cambridge CB2 1QH, UK.
Previous research in the evolutionary and psychological sciences has suggested that markers or tags of ethnic or group membership may help to solve cooperation and coordination problems. Cheating remains, however, a problem for these views, insofar as it is possible to fake the tag. While evolutionary psychologists have suggested that humans evolved the propensity to overcome this free rider problem, it is unclear how this module might manifest at the group level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Lang
January 2025
Basque Center on Cognition, Brain and Language, San Sebastian, Spain; University School of Medicine, 291 Campus Drive, Li Ka Shing Building, Stanford, CA 94305 5101, USA; Stanford University Graduate School of Education, 485 Lasuen Mall, Stanford, CA 94305, USA; University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Via Campi 287, 41125 Modena, Italy.
Previous studies indicate differences in native and foreign speech processing (Lev-Ari, 2018), with mixed evidence for differences between dialectal and foreign accent processing (Adank, Evans, Stuart-Smith, & Scott, 2009; Floccia et al., 2006, 2009; Girard, Floccia, & Goslin, 2008). Two theories have been proposed: The Perceptual Distance Hypothesis suggests that dialectal accent processing is an attenuated version of foreign accent processing (Clarke & Garrett, 2004), while the Different Processes Hypothesis argues that foreign and dialectal accents are processed via distinct mechanisms (Floccia, Butler, Girard, & Goslin, 2009).
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