| Literature DB >> 34483779 |
Margaret Cychosz1,2, Benjamin Munson3, Jan R Edwards1.
Abstract
Much research in child speech development suggests that young children coarticulate more than adults. There are multiple, not mutually-exclusive, explanations for this pattern. For example, children may coarticulate more because they are limited by immature motor control. Or they may coarticulate more if they initially represent phonological segments in larger, more holistic units such as syllables or feet. We tested the importance of several different explanations for coarticulation in child speech by evaluating how four-year-olds' language experience, speech practice, and speech planning predicted their coarticulation between adjacent segments in real words and paired nonwords. Children with larger vocabularies coarticulated less, especially in real words, though there were no reliable coarticulatory differences between real words and nonwords after controlling for word duration. Children who vocalized more throughout a daylong audio recording also coarticulated less. Quantity of child vocalizations was more predictive of the degree of children's coarticulation than a measure of receptive language experience, adult word count. Overall, these results suggest strong roles for children's phonological representations and speech practice, as well as their immature fine motor control, for coarticulatory development.Entities:
Keywords: LENA; coarticulation; naturalistic recording; phonology; speech development; speech production; word repetition
Year: 2021 PMID: 34483779 PMCID: PMC8412131 DOI: 10.1080/15475441.2021.1890080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lang Learn Dev ISSN: 1547-3341