| Literature DB >> 24205112 |
Catherine Saint-Georges1, Mohamed Chetouani, Raquel Cassel, Fabio Apicella, Ammar Mahdhaoui, Filippo Muratori, Marie-Christine Laznik, David Cohen.
Abstract
Various aspects of motherese also known as infant-directed speech (IDS) have been studied for many years. As it is a widespread phenomenon, it is suspected to play some important roles in infant development. Therefore, our purpose was to provide an update of the evidence accumulated by reviewing all of the empirical or experimental studies that have been published since 1966 on IDS driving factors and impacts. Two databases were screened and 144 relevant studies were retained. General linguistic and prosodic characteristics of IDS were found in a variety of languages, and IDS was not restricted to mothers. IDS varied with factors associated with the caregiver (e.g., cultural, psychological and physiological) and the infant (e.g., reactivity and interactive feedback). IDS promoted infants' affect, attention and language learning. Cognitive aspects of IDS have been widely studied whereas affective ones still need to be developed. However, during interactions, the following two observations were notable: (1) IDS prosody reflects emotional charges and meets infants' preferences, and (2) mother-infant contingency and synchrony are crucial for IDS production and prolongation. Thus, IDS is part of an interactive loop that may play an important role in infants' cognitive and social development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24205112 PMCID: PMC3800080 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Diagram flow of the literature search.
Characteristics of the studies included in the review.
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| Main objective to explore or assess… ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Durkin 1982 | 18 | Cross-sectional observational | Functions of use of proper names | |||
| Fernald 1984 | 24 | Paired comparisons IDS/simulated IDS/ADS | Prosodic features according to infant feed-back | |||
| Fisher 1995 | 20 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features on new/given words | |||
| Soderstrom 2008 | 2 | Longitudinal case series | Prosodic and linguistic features | |||
| Fernald 1991 | 18 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features on focused words | |||
| Ogle 1993 | 8 | Cross- overIDS/ADS (electrolaryngography) | Prosodic features (F0 measures) | |||
| Fernald 1989a | 30 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features for mothers and fathers across 6 languages | |||
| Niwano 2003b | 3 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features for mothers and fathers, + infant’s responses | |||
| Shute 1999 | 16 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features for fathers speaking and reading aloud | |||
| Shute 2001 | 16 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features for grandmothers speaking and reading aloud | |||
| Nwokah 1987 | 16 | Case-control (Mother/maid) | Linguistic and functional features of maids’ IDS | |||
| Katz 1996 | 49 | Paired comparisons with pragmatic categories of IDS | Prosodic contours according to intention | |||
| Stern 1982 | 6 | Case-series | Prosodic contours according to intention, grammar, and context | |||
| Papoušek 1991 | 20 | Case-control (Chinese/English) | Prosodic contours according to context in different languages | |||
| Slaney 2003 | 12 | Paired comparisons (IDS with various intentions) | Acoustic measures according to affect (automatic classification) | |||
| Trainor, 2000 | 96 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with various emotions | Links between IDS and affective expression | |||
| Inoue, 2011 | 24 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Wether Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients discriminate IDS from ADS | |||
| Mahdhaoui 2011 | 11 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Automatic detection based on prosodic and segmental features | |||
| Cristia, 2010 | 55 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Enhancement of consonantal categories | |||
| Albin 1996 | 16 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Lengthening of word-final syllables | |||
| Swanson 1992 | 15 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Vowel duration of content words as opposed to function words | |||
| Swanson 1994 | 22 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Vowel duration of function-word in utterance final position | |||
| Englund 2006 | 6 | Longitudinal Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Vowels and consonant specification throughout the first semester | |||
| Englund, 2005a | 6 | Longitudinal Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Spectral attributes and duration of vowels throughout a semester | |||
| Englund, 2005b | 6 | Longitudinal Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Evolution of voice onset time in stops throughout a semester | |||
| Lee 2010 | 10 | Case-control (IDS/ADS) | Segmental distribution patterns in English IDS | |||
| Shute 1989 | 8 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Pitch Variations in British IDS (compared to American IDS) | |||
| Segal 2009 | 11 | Longitudinal descriptive study | Prosodic and lexical features in Hebrew IDS | |||
| Lee 2008 | 10 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Segmental distribution patterns in Korean IDS | |||
| Grieser 1988 | 8 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic features in a tone language IDS (Mandarin Chinese) | |||
| Liu 2007 | 16 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Exaggeration of lexical tones in Mandarin IDS | |||
| Fais 2010 | 10 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Vowel devoicing in Japanese IDS | |||
| Masataka 1992 | 8 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Rhythm, repetition and gestual exaggeration in Japanese sign language | |||
| Reilly 1996 | 15 | Longitudinal descriptive study | Competition between affect and grammar in American sign language | |||
| Werker 2007 | 30 | Cross-language comparison | Differences in distributional properties of vowel phonetic categories | |||
| Kitamura 2003 | 12 | Longitudinal Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Pitch and communicative intent according to age | |||
| Stern 1983 | 6 | Longitudinal case-series | Prosodic features evolution | |||
| Niwano 2002b | 50 | Longitudinal case-series | Pitch and Prosodic contours according to age | |||
| Liu 2009 | 17 | Longitudinal Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Prosodic and phonetic features according to age | |||
| Kajikawa 2004 | 2 | Longitudinal case-series | Adult conversational style (Speech overlap) emergence in Japanese IDS | |||
| Amano 2006 | 5 | Longitudinal case-series | Changes in F0 according to infant age and language acquisition stage | |||
| Snow 1972 | 12/24/6 | Paired comparisons IDS/CDS | Linguistic features according to children age | |||
| Kitamura 2002 | 22 | Longitudinal Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Pitch according to infant age and gender in English and Thaï languages | |||
| Braarud 2008 | 32 | Paired comparisons synchrony/dyssynchrony | IDS quantity according to infant feed-back and synchrony | |||
| Smith 2008 | 18 | Controlled trial (2 experimental groups) | Pitch variations according to infant feed-back from the pitch | |||
| Shimura 1992 | 8 | Correlation study | Between mother and infant vocalizations (pitch, duration, latency, melody) | |||
| Van Puyvelde 2010 | 15 | Correlation study | Between mother and infant vocalizations (pitch, melody) | |||
| McRoberts 1997 | 1 | Longitudinal case-study | Mother, father and infant adjustment of pitch vocalizations during interaction | |||
| Reissland 1999 | 13 | Case-control (premature/term infants) | Timing and reciprocal vocal responsiveness of mothers and infants | |||
| Niwano 2003a | 1 | Paired comparisons (mother with twins) | Pitch and contours variations according to infant reactivity | |||
| Reissland 2002 | 48 | Case-control (age) + Correlation study | Pitch of IDS surprise exclamation according to infant age/reaction to surprise | |||
| Lederberg 1984 | 15 | Paired comparisons deaf/hearing children | Adult adjustment in interaction with deaf children | |||
| Fidler, 2003 | 36 | Case-control (Down syndrome/other MR) | Pitch’s mean and variance in parental IDS to Down syndrome/other MR | |||
| Gogate 2000 | 24 | Case-control (5-8;9-17;21-30 months) | Multimodal IDS according to infants' levels of lexical-mapping development | |||
| Kavanaugh 1982 | 4 | Longitudinal case-series | Mother/father linguistic input according to apparition of productive language | |||
| Bohannon 1977 | 20 | Correlation study | MLU of IDS according to child’s feed-back of comprehension | |||
| 20 | Paired comparisons (manipulating feed-back) | |||||
| Bergeson 2006 | 27 | Case-control (cochlear implant/control) | IDS adjustment (pitch, MLU, rhythm) according to childs' hearing experience | |||
| Kondaurova 2010 | 27 | Longitudinal case-control | IDS adjustment according to child’s hearing experience and age | |||
| Ikeda 1999 | 61 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Variations according to various life experience (especially having sibling) | |||
| Hoff 2005 | 63 | Prospective study | Variations of linguistic input and teaching practices according to parental socio- | |||
| 662 | Cross-sectional study | - economic status or education, and repercussions on child vocabulary | ||||
| Hoff-Ginsberg 1991 | 63 | Cross-sectional study | Variations of input according to parental socio-economic status (SES) | |||
| Matsuda 2011 | 65 | Correlation study | Functional RMI of adults listening to IDS according to gender, parental status | |||
| Gordon 2010 | 160 | Prospective study | Oxytocin level according to infant’s age and correlation with parenting | |||
| Bettes 1998 | 36 | Case-control | Maternal behavior (including IDS prosody) according to depression status | |||
| Herrera 2004 | 72 | Case-control | IDS content and touching according to maternal depression status | |||
| Kaplan 2001 | 44 | Correlation study | Variations according to maternal age and depression status | |||
| Wan 2008 | 50 | Case-control | Variations of IDS characteristics according to maternal schizophrenia status | |||
| Nwokah 1999 | 13 | Case-control | IDS amount, structure, and content in maids compared with mothers | |||
| Burnham 2002 | 12 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS/petDS | Pitch, affect (intonation + rhythm) and hyperarticulation in IDS versus petDS | |||
| Green 2010 | 25 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Lip movements | |||
| Rice 1986 | 2 | Case-series | Description of speech in educational television programs compared with CDS | |||
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| Main objective to explore or assess | |||
| Fernald 1989b | 5 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with various intentions | Adult’s detection of communicative intent according to prosodic contours | |||
| Bryant 2007 | 8 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with various intentions | Adult’s detection of communicative intent according to prosodic contours | |||
| Fernald 1993 | 120 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with various intentions | Communication of affect ( to infants) through prosodic contours | |||
| Papousek 1990 | 32 | Paired comparisons approval/disapproval intent | Communicating affect (looking response) through prosodic contours | |||
| Santesso 2007 | 39 | Paired comparisons with various affects | Psycho-physiological (ECG, EEG) responses to IDS with various affects | |||
| Monnot 1999 | 52 | Correlation study | IDS effects on infant’s development level and growth parameters | |||
| Santarcangelo 1988 | 6/4 | Correlation study + paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Developmentally disabled children’s preference (responsiveness, eye-gaze) | |||
| Werker 1989 | 60 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with males/females | Infant’s preference (looking, facial expression) for male and female IDS | |||
| Schachner 2010 | 20 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Subsequent visual infant’s preference for the speaker | |||
| Masataka 1998 | 45 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Infant’s preference for infant-directed (versus adult-directed) Sign Language | |||
| Cooper 1993 | 96 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | 1 month-old infant’s preference for IDS | |||
| Cooper 1990 | 28 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Experimental (looking producing IDS) testing of 0-1 month-olds’ preference | |||
| Pegg 1992 | 92 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Young infant’s attentional and affective preference for male and female IDS | |||
| Niwano 2002a | 40 | Paired comparisons with manipulated IDS | Infant’s preference (through eliciting vocal response) | |||
| Hayashi 2001 | 8 | Longitudinal paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Developmental change in infant’s preference (according to age) | |||
| Newman 2006 | 90 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS at 3 ages/2 noise levels | Change in infant’s preference according to developmental age and to noise | |||
| Panneton 2006 | 48 | Paired comparisons with manipulated IDS at 2 ages | Change in determinants of infant’s preference according to developmental age | |||
| Cooper 1997 | 20/20/23 | 3 Paired comparisons IDS/ADS in various conditions | Change in infant’s preference according to age and speaker (mother/stranger) | |||
| Hepper 1993 | 30 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | New-born’s preference for maternal IDS or ADS | |||
| Kitamura 2009 | 24 | 3 Paired comparisons IDS with various contours | Change in determinants of infant’s preference according to developmental age | |||
| Kaplan 1994 | 45/80 | 2 Paired comparisons IDS with various contours | Change in determinants of infant’s preference according to developmental age | |||
| Spence 2003 | 42 | 3 Paired comparisons IDS with various intents | Intent categorization ability according to age (4 months/6 months) | |||
| Johnson 2002 | 210 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS (prosody or content) | Adult’s preference for IDS/ADS according to history of head injury | |||
| Cooper 1994 | 12/20/20/16 | 4 Paired comparisons manipulated IDS/ADS | Do pitch contours determine 1-month-olds’ preference for IDS? | |||
| Fernald 1987 | 20 | Paired comparisons with manipulated IDS | Do pitch, amplitude or rhythm determine 4-month-olds’ preference for IDS? | |||
| Leibold 2007 | 57 | Paired comparisons with manipulated sounds | Acoustic determinants of 4-month-olds’ preference for IDS | |||
| Trainor 1998 | 16 | Paired comparisons low or high pitched songs | Acoustic determinants of infant’s preference for IDS | |||
| Singh 2002 | 36 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with various affects | Does affect (emotional intensity) determine infant’s preference for IDS ? | |||
| McRoberts 2009 | 144/62/24/48 | 4 Paired comparisons with manipulated IDS /ADS | Does repetition influence infant’s preference for age-inappropriate IDS/ADS? | |||
| Saito 2007 | 20 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Does IDS activate brain of neonates (near-infra-red spectroscopy)? | |||
| Kaplan 1996 | 104/78/80 | 3 Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Does IDS (paired with what facial expressions) increase conditioned learning? | |||
| Kaplan 1995 | 77/26 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Does IDS engage and maintain infant’s attention? | |||
| Senju 2008 | 20 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS | Does IDS engage infant’s joint attention (eye-tracking) ? | |||
| Nakata 2004 | 43 | Paired comparisons maternal IDS/maternal singing | Does IDS engage and maintain infant’s attention over singing? | |||
| Kaplan 2002 | 12 | Paired comparisons depressed/non depressed IDS | Does IDS increase conditioned learning, according to mother depression? | |||
| Kaplan 1999 | 225 | Controlled trials with IDS varying in quality | Does IDS increase conditioned learning, according to mother depressiveness? | |||
| Kaplan 2010a | 134 | Case-control | Does mother depression duration affect infant’s learning with normal IDS? | |||
| Kaplan 2004 | 40 | Paired comparisons with maternal/female/male IDS | Does IDS speaker’s gender affect learning by infants of depressed mothers? | |||
| Kaplan 2010b | 141 | Case-control (2x2 ANOVA) | How marital status and mother depression affect learning with male IDS? | |||
| Kaplan 2007 | 39 | Case-control | Does father depression affect infant’s conditioned learning with paternal IDS? | |||
| Kaplan 2009 | 55 | Correlation study | Does maternal sensitivity affect infant’s learning with maternal IDS? | |||
| Karzon 1985 | 192 | Controlled trials: IDS/manipulated IDS/ADS | Do supra-segmental features of IDS help polysyllabic discrimination? | |||
| Karzon 1989 | 64 | Controlled trials: falling/rising contours | Does IDS prosody help syllabic discrimination and how? | |||
| Vallabha 2007 | - | Automatic computed vowels categorization | Does IDS prosody help categorization of sounds from the native language? | |||
| Trainor 2002 | 96 | Controlled trials | How IDS high pitch/ IDS exaggerated contours help vowel discrimination? | |||
| Hirsh-Pasek 1987 | 16/24 | Paired comparisons with manipulated IDS | Does IDS prosody help to segment speech into clausal units? | |||
| Kemler Nelson 1989 | 32 | Randomized controlled trials with IDS/ADS | Does IDS/ADS prosody help to segment speech into clausal units? | |||
| Thiessen 2005 | 40 | Controlled trials with IDS/ADS | Does IDS prosody help word segmentation? | |||
| D’Odorico 2006 | 18 | Case-control late-talker/typical peers | Does (prosodic and linguistic) maternal input help language acquisition? | |||
| Curtin 2005 | 24 | Serie of 5 experiments | Does lexical stress help language acquisition (speech segmentation)? | |||
| Singh 2008 | 40 | Serie of 4 experiments (controlled trials) | Does IDS vocal affect help word recognition? | |||
| Colombo 1995 | 27 | Paired comparisons with manipulated sounds | Does F0 modulation in IDS help words recognition in a noisy ambient? | |||
| Zangl 2007 | 19/17 | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS at 2 ages | Does IDS/ADS prosody activate brain for familiar and unfamiliar words? | |||
| Song 2010 | 48 | Paired comparisons IDS/manipulated IDS | Does IDS rhythm/hyper-articulation/pitch amplitude help word recognition? | |||
| Bard 1983 | 94 | 4 Paired comparisons IDS/ADS with adult listeners | Does IDS help word recognition, according to word contextual predictability? | |||
| Bortfeld 2010 | 16/32/24/80 | 4 paired comparisons IDS words with various stress | Does emphatic stress in IDS prosody help word recognition ? | |||
| Kirchhoff 2005 | Automatic | Paired comparisons IDS/ADS words | Does IDS prosody help automatic speech recognition ? | |||
| Singh 2009 | 32 | Longitudinal paired comparisons (?) IDS/ADS | Does IDS prosody help word recognition over the long-term? | |||
| Golinkoff 1995 | 61/79 | Randomized controlled trials IDS/ADS | Does IDS prosody help adult word recognition in an unfamiliar language? | |||
| Newport 1977 | 12 | Longitudinal prospective correlation study | Does maternal IDS linguistic properties predict child language acquisition? | |||
| Gleitman 1984 | 6/6 | Same as Newport 1977 | New analyses on the same data but with 2 age-equated groups | |||
| Scarborough 1986 | 9 | Longitudinal prospective correlation study | Does maternal IDS linguistic properties predict child language acquisition ? | |||
| Furrow 1979 | 7 | Longitudinal prospective correlation study | Does maternal IDS linguistic properties predict child language acquisition ? | |||
| Rowe 2008 | 47 | Prospective study | Does input according to parental SES affect child’s vocabulary? | |||
| Hampson 1993 | 45 | Longitudinal prospective study | Does maternal IDS linguistic properties predict language acquisition ? | |||
| Waterfall 2010 | 12 | Longitudinal study + computational analysis | Does IDS linguistic properties help language acquisition? | |||
| Onnis 2008 | 44/29 | Randomized controlled trials Overlap/not | Does IDS properties (overlapping sentences) help word/grammar acquisition? | |||
| Fernald 2006 | 24 | Paired comparisons with words isolated/not | Which properties (isolated words/short sentences) help language acquisition? | |||
| Kempe 2005 | 72/168 | Randomized controlled trials Invariance/not | Does IDS diminutives (final syllable invariance) help word segmentation? | |||
| Kempe 2007 | 486 | Randomized controlled trials Invariance/not | Does IDS diminutives (final syllable invariance) help word segmentation? | |||
| Kempe 2003 | 46 | Paired comparisons with diminutives/not | Does IDS diminutives help gender categorization? | |||
| Seva 2007 | 24/22 | Paired comparisons with diminutives/not | Does IDS diminutives help gender categorization? | |||
N refers to number of adults speaking in motherese production studies, and to infants (or sometimes adults) listening in motherese effects studies.
IDS=Infant-Directed Speech: ADS=Adult-Directed Speech
Figure 2Summary of the motherese interactive loop (a) and its socio-cognitive implications (2B).
1A: The motherese interactive loop implies that motherese is both a vector and a reflection of mother-infant interaction.
2B: Motherese affects intersubjective construction and learning. Its implications for infants’ early socio-cognitive development are evident in affect transmission and sharing, and in infants’ preferences, engagement, attention, learning and language acquisition.