Literature DB >> 18537301

Infants use prosodically conditioned acoustic-phonetic cues to extract words from speech.

Elizabeth K Johnson1.   

Abstract

The Headturn Preference Paradigm was used to examine infants' use of prosodically conditioned acoustic-phonetic cues to find words in speech. Twelve-month-olds were familiarized to one passage containing an intended target (e.g., toga from toga#lore) and one passage containing an unintended target (e.g., dogma from dog#maligns). Infants were tested on the familiarized intended word (e.g., toga), familiarized unintended word (e.g., dogma), and two unfamiliar words. Infants listened longer to familiar intended words than to familiar unintended or unfamiliar words, demonstrating their use of word-level prosodically conditioned cues to segment words from speech. Implications for models of developmental speech perception are discussed.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18537301     DOI: 10.1121/1.2908407

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  7 in total

1.  Mismatch negativity and adaptation measures of the late auditory evoked potential in cochlear implant users.

Authors:  Fawen Zhang; Theresa Hammer; Holly-Lolan Banks; Chelsea Benson; Jing Xiang; Qian-Jie Fu
Journal:  Hear Res       Date:  2010-12-01       Impact factor: 3.208

2.  Testing the limits of statistical learning for word segmentation.

Authors:  Elizabeth K Johnson; Michael D Tyler
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2010-03

3.  Hearing versus Listening: Attention to Speech and Its Role in Language Acquisition in Deaf Infants with Cochlear Implants.

Authors:  Derek M Houston; Tonya R Bergeson
Journal:  Lingua       Date:  2014-01-01

4.  Temporal Attention as a Scaffold for Language Development.

Authors:  Ruth de Diego-Balaguer; Anna Martinez-Alvarez; Ferran Pons
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-02-02

Review 5.  Emotional and Interactional Prosody across Animal Communication Systems: A Comparative Approach to the Emergence of Language.

Authors:  Piera Filippi
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-09-28

Review 6.  Voice modulatory cues to structure across languages and species.

Authors:  Theresa Matzinger; W Tecumseh Fitch
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 6.237

7.  The edge factor in early word segmentation: utterance-level prosody enables word form extraction by 6-month-olds.

Authors:  Elizabeth K Johnson; Amanda Seidl; Michael D Tyler
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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