| Literature DB >> 34346255 |
Abstract
This study examined the acoustic characteristics of disyllabic words produced by French-speaking monolingual and bilingual children, aged 2;6 to 6;10, and by adults. Specifically, it investigated the influence of age, bilingualism, and vocabulary on final-to-initial syllable duration ratios and on the presence of initial and final accent. Children and adults took part in a word-naming task in which they produced a controlled set of disyllabic words. Duration and maximum pitch were measured for each syllable of the disyllabic word and these values were inserted into mixed-effects statistical models. Results indicated that children as young as 2;6 obtained final-to-initial syllable duration ratios similar to those of adults. Young children realized accent on the initial syllable more often and accent on the final syllable less often than older children and adults. There was no influence of bilingualism on the duration and pitch characteristics of disyllabic words. Children aged 2;6 with smaller vocabularies produced initial accent more often than children with large vocabularies. Our findings suggest that early word productions are constrained by developmental tendencies favouring falling pitch across an utterance.Entities:
Keywords: Prosodic development; bilingualism; vocabulary development
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34346255 PMCID: PMC9014682 DOI: 10.1177/00238309211030312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lang Speech ISSN: 0023-8309 Impact factor: 1.835
Figure 1.Production of the phrase un gateau /œ̃ gato/ “cake” indicating the presence of final accent only.
Figure 2.Production of the phrase un soleil /œ̃ solej/ “a sun” indicating the presence of initial accent only.
Figure 3.Production of the phrase c’est bateau /se bato/ “that boat” indicating the presence of initial and final accent.
Figure 4.Production of the word cadeau /kado/ “present” realized with little pitch variation. We refer to these productions as non-accented.
A summary of predictions on cross-linguistic interaction in word prosody. Predictions are based on a comparison of bilingual with monolingual results.
| Bilinguals’ | Final/Non-final | Presence of | Presence of |
|---|---|---|---|
| Romance | Reduced (weaker) | Greater presence | Lesser presence |
| Germanic | Reduced (stronger) | Greater presence | Lesser presence |
L1: First language.
Disyllabic words produced by children aged 2;6 and 3 to 6 and by adults.
| Words produced by children aged 2;6 | Words produced by children aged 3 to 6 | Words produced by adults |
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| chemise |
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| garçon |
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| poulet | guitare | |
| requin |
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| tambour |
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Words in bold were produced by at least two of the age groups.
Figure 5.Production of the word salade /salad/ “salad” indicating the presence of initial and final accent. When no function word was present, initial-final accent was determined by presence of pitch excursion in one or both of the syllables.
Means and standard deviations (SDs) of syllable durations and duration ratios for the three age groups of children (2;6, 3 to 4, 5 to 6) and for the adults.
| Age | Duration initial | Duration final | Duration ratio final/initial | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
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| 2;6 | 139.81 | 49.56 | 210.00 | 89.88 | 1.64 | .84 | 343 |
| 3 to 4 | 142.46 | 49.13 | 237.06 | 112.34 | 1.74 | .81 | 404 |
| 5 to 6 | 107.46 | 39.40 | 204.96 | 99.16 | 2.04 | 1.02 | 388 |
| Adult | 96.25 | 25.29 | 166.47 | 75.87 | 1.77 | .79 | 207 |
Means and standard deviations (SDs) of duration ratios for the children according to bilingual status.
| Age 2;6 | Age 3 to 6 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duration ratio final/initial | Duration ratio final/initial | |||||
| Mean |
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| Mean |
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| Mon | 1.62 | .87 | 182 | 1.90 | .90 | 280 |
| Bi-Rom | 1.66 | .79 | 161 | 1.85 | .92 | 261 |
| Bi-Ger | 1.91 | .98 | 251 | |||
Mon: monolinguals; Bi-Rom: bilinguals speaking Romance languages; Bi-Ger: bilinguals speaking Germanic languages.
Means and standard deviations (SDs) of maximum pitch and pitch differences (in semitones) for the three age groups of children and for the adults.
| Age | Max. F0 initial | Max. F0 final | Semitone difference initial-final | ||||
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| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
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| 2;6 | 374.66 | 78.53 | 333.88 | 73.14 | 1.99 | 2.42 | 344 |
| 3 to 4 | 318.86 | 67.03 | 297.43 | 62.39 | 1.20 | 2.42 | 400 |
| 5 to 6 | 287.56 | 43.45 | 293.09 | 63.03 | –.15 | 3.69 | 389 |
| Adult | 165.81 | 62.36 | 168.93 | 59.93 | –.50 | 2.90 | 207 |
F0: fundamental frequency.
The mean percentage (and standard deviations, SDs) of productions realized with initial accent, final accent, initial-final accent, “duration only” accent, and “other” according to age and bilingual status.
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| Initial | Final | Initial-Final | Duration only | Other | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
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| Age 2;6 | |||||||||||
| Mon | 184 | 68.11 | 14.99 | 5.68 | 5.61 | 8.80 | 10.71 | 6.36 | 6.35 | 11.75 | 9.44 |
| Bi | 160 | 62.09 | 23.32 | 9.99 | 8.72 | 8.40 | 7.13 | 8.39 | 9.53 | 11.20 | 9.61 |
| Age 3 to 4 | |||||||||||
| Mon | 143 | 37.40 | 20.54 | 11.07 | 8.35 | 13.49 | 9.83 | 20.02 | 17.86 | 18.03 | 14.94 |
| Bi | 257 | 46.46 | 21.02 | 4.76 | 7.60 | 13.03 | 21.35 | 17.93 | 13.54 | 17.81 | 16.19 |
| Age 5 to 6 | |||||||||||
| Mon | 131 | 32.69 | 18.65 | 14.36 | 23.45 | 14.70 | 11.36 | 24.69 | 16.88 | 15.02 | 13.16 |
| Bi | 258 | 30.33 | 20.32 | 33.62 | 25.25 | 13.81 | 12.02 | 12.37 | 13.18 | 9.88 | 9.11 |
| Adults | |||||||||||
| Mon | 207 | 22.48 | 19.51 | 29.89 | 12.51 | 16.68 | 9.83 | 13.17 | 8.79 | 17.77 | 13.56 |
Mon: monolingual; Bi: bilingual.
Figure 6.Scatterplot of the relation between percent initial accent and French vocabulary level in children aged 2;6.
Summary of the duration and pitch results.
| Duration | Pitch | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Variables | Final/Non-final ratios | Initial accent | Final accent |
| Age | Children aged 2;6 had smaller duration ratios than children aged 5 to 6 but not adults | Children aged 2;6 had higher presence of initial accent than older children and adults. | Children aged 2;6 and 3 to 4 had lower presence of final accent than older children and adults. |
| Bilingual status/type (or dominance) | No influence | No influence | No influence |
| Vocabulary level | No influence in younger or older children | Children aged 2;6 with lower vocabulary levels displayed
greater presence of initial accent. | No influence in younger or older children. |