Literature DB >> 25118791

Acquisition of the stop-spirant alternation in bilingual Mexican Spanish-English speaking children: theoretical and clinical implications.

Leah Fabiano-Smith1, Trianna Oglivie, Olivia Maiefski, Jessamyn Schertz.   

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to identify characteristics of typical acquisition of the Mexican Spanish stop-spirant alternation in bilingual Spanish-English speaking children and to shed light on the theoretical debate over which sound is the underlying form in the stop-spirant allophonic relationship. We predicted that bilingual children would acquire knowledge of this allophonic relationship by the time they reach age 5;0 (years;months) and would demonstrate higher accuracy on the spirants, indicating their role as the underlying phoneme. This quasi-longitudinal study examined children's single word samples in Spanish from ages 2;4-8;2. Samples were phonetically transcribed and analyzed for accuracy, substitution errors and acoustically for intensity ratios. Bilingual children demonstrated overall higher accuracy on the voiced stops as compared to the spirants. Differences in substitution errors across ages were found and acoustic analyses corroborated perceptual findings. The clinical implication of this research is that bilingual children may be in danger of overdiagnosis of speech sound disorders because acquisition of this allophonic rule in bilinguals appears to differ from what has been found in previous studies examining monolingual Spanish speakers.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bilingualism; phonological acquisition; spanish; stop-spirant alternation

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25118791      PMCID: PMC4682571          DOI: 10.3109/02699206.2014.947540

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Linguist Phon        ISSN: 0269-9206            Impact factor:   1.346


  15 in total

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6.  The acquisition of the voicing contrast in Spanish: a phonetic and phonological study of word-initial stop consonants.

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Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  1980-10

7.  Phonologic error distributions in the Iowa-Nebraska Articulation Norms Project: consonant singletons.

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8.  Identifiers of predominantly Spanish-speaking children with language impairment.

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9.  Speech-language pathologists' assessment practices for children with suspected speech sound disorders: results of a national survey.

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  2 in total

1.  Allophony in English Language Learners: The Case of Tap in English and Spanish.

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2.  Vocabulary and Phonological Abilities Affect Dual Language Learners' Consonant Production Accuracy Within and Across Languages: A Large-Scale Study of 3- to 6-Year-Old Spanish-English Dual Language Learners.

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