LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE INFLUENCES NON-LINGUISTIC PITCH PERCEPTION Gang Peng The Chinese University of Hong Kong SIAT, Chinese Academy of Sciences Danjie Su University of California at Los Angeles Diana Deutsch and Trevor Henthorn University of California at San Diego William S-Y. Wang The Chinese University of Hong Kong Academic Sinica, Taipei University of California at Berkeley ABSTRACT Following publication of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, evidence has accumulated for the influence of language experience on perception. There are thousands of languages in the world which make use of pitch patterns to construct words much as vowels and consonants are used, among which Mandarin (a.k.a. Putonghua) is a typical tone language. This study examines the effect of language experience (tone language experience vs. nontone language experience) on non-linguistic pitch perception. First, we show a significantly higher prevalence of absolute pitch among native tone-language-speaking music students than among nontone-language-speaking music students. Moreover, we show that language experience shapes the perception of tone sweeps, extending the influence of language prototypes from the linguistic domain to the non- linguistic domain. Taken together, these results demonstrate that language experience affects auditory perception, and so provide evidence for the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis in the auditory modality. SUBJECT KEYWORDS Absolute pitch Tone sweep Sapir-Whorf hypothesis Pitch perception Tone language