Infant-Directed Prosody Helps Infants Map Sounds to Meanings

被引:92
作者
Estes, Katharine Graf [1 ]
Hurley, Karinna [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Psychol, Davis, CA 95616 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
MOTHERS SPEECH; MATERNAL SPEECH; CROSS-LANGUAGE; PITCH CHARACTERISTICS; AUDITORY PREFERENCES; PHONETIC DETAIL; AGE; VARIABILITY; JAPANESE; WORDS;
D O I
10.1111/infa.12006
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Adults typically use an exaggerated, distinctive speaking style when addressing infants. However, the effects of infant-directed (ID) speech on infants' learning are not yet well understood. This research investigates how ID speech affects how infants perform a key function in language acquisition, associating the sounds of words with their meanings. Seventeen-month-old infants were presented with two label-object pairs in a habituation-based word learning task. In Experiment 1, the labels were produced in adult-directed (AD) speech. In Experiment 2, the labels were produced in ID prosody; they had higher pitch, greater pitch variation, and longer durations than the AD labels. We found that infants failed to learn the labels in AD speech, but succeeded in learning the same labels when they were produced in ID speech. Experiment 3 investigated the role of variability in learning from ID speech. When the labels were presented in ID prosody with no variation across tokens, infants failed to learn them. Our findings indicate that ID prosody can affect how readily infants map sounds to meanings and that the variability in prosody that is characteristic of ID speech may play a key role in its effect on learning new words.
引用
收藏
页码:797 / 824
页数:28
相关论文
共 69 条
[41]   Before and after the vocabulary spurt: two modes of word acquisition? [J].
Nazzi, T ;
Bertoncini, J .
DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2003, 6 (02) :136-142
[42]   HOW THE PROSODIC CUES IN MOTHERESE MIGHT ASSIST LANGUAGE-LEARNING [J].
NELSON, DGK ;
HIRSHPASEK, K ;
JUSCZYK, PW ;
CASSIDY, KW .
JOURNAL OF CHILD LANGUAGE, 1989, 16 (01) :55-68
[43]   Changes in preference for infant-directed speech in low and moderate noise by 4.5-to 13-month-olds [J].
Newman, Rochelle S. ;
Hussain, Isma .
INFANCY, 2006, 10 (01) :61-76
[44]   TALKING TO CHILDREN IN WESTERN SAMOA [J].
OCHS, E .
LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY, 1982, 11 (01) :77-104
[45]   DIDACTIC ADJUSTMENTS IN FATHERS AND MOTHERS SPEECH TO THEIR 3-MONTH-OLD INFANTS [J].
PAPOUSEK, M ;
PAPOUSEK, H ;
HAEKEL, M .
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 1987, 16 (05) :491-516
[46]   Finding the Signal by Adding Noise: The Role of Noncontrastive Phonetic Variability in Early Word Learning [J].
Rost, Gwyneth C. ;
McMurray, Bob .
INFANCY, 2010, 15 (06) :608-635
[47]   Speaker variability augments phonological processing in early word learning [J].
Rost, Gwyneth C. ;
McMurray, Bob .
DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2009, 12 (02) :339-349
[48]  
SCARBOROUGH H, 1986, J CHILD LANG, V13, P431, DOI 10.1017/S0305000900008163
[49]   Toddlers recognize words in an unfamiliar accent after brief exposure [J].
Schmale, Rachel ;
Cristia, Alejandrina ;
Seidl, Amanda .
DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2012, 15 (06) :732-738
[50]   Infant word segmentation revisited: edge alignment facilitates target extraction [J].
Seidl, Amanda ;
Johnson, Elizabeth K. .
DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2006, 9 (06) :565-573