1,111 research outputs found

    Are words easier to learn from infant- than adult-directed speech? A quantitative corpus-based investigation

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    We investigate whether infant-directed speech (IDS) could facilitate word form learning when compared to adult-directed speech (ADS). To study this, we examine the distribution of word forms at two levels, acoustic and phonological, using a large database of spontaneous speech in Japanese. At the acoustic level we show that, as has been documented before for phonemes, the realizations of words are more variable and less discriminable in IDS than in ADS. At the phonological level, we find an effect in the opposite direction: the IDS lexicon contains more distinctive words (such as onomatopoeias) than the ADS counterpart. Combining the acoustic and phonological metrics together in a global discriminability score reveals that the bigger separation of lexical categories in the phonological space does not compensate for the opposite effect observed at the acoustic level. As a result, IDS word forms are still globally less discriminable than ADS word forms, even though the effect is numerically small. We discuss the implication of these findings for the view that the functional role of IDS is to improve language learnability.Comment: Draf

    The listening talker: A review of human and algorithmic context-induced modifications of speech

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    International audienceSpeech output technology is finding widespread application, including in scenarios where intelligibility might be compromised - at least for some listeners - by adverse conditions. Unlike most current algorithms, talkers continually adapt their speech patterns as a response to the immediate context of spoken communication, where the type of interlocutor and the environment are the dominant situational factors influencing speech production. Observations of talker behaviour can motivate the design of more robust speech output algorithms. Starting with a listener-oriented categorisation of possible goals for speech modification, this review article summarises the extensive set of behavioural findings related to human speech modification, identifies which factors appear to be beneficial, and goes on to examine previous computational attempts to improve intelligibility in noise. The review concludes by tabulating 46 speech modifications, many of which have yet to be perceptually or algorithmically evaluated. Consequently, the review provides a roadmap for future work in improving the robustness of speech output

    Sing for me, Mama! Infants' discrimination of novel vowels in song

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    When adults speak or sing with infants, they sound differently than in adult communication. Infant-directed (ID) communication helps caregivers to regulate infants’ emotions, and helps infants to process speech information, at least from ID-speech. However, it is largely unclear whether infants might also process speech information presented in ID-singing. Therefore, we examined whether infants discriminate vowels in ID-singing, as well as potential differences with ID-speech. Using an Alternating-Trial-Preference-Procedure, infants aged 4-6 and 8-10 months were tested on their discrimination of an unfamiliar non-native vowel contrast presented in ID-like speech and singing. Relying on models of early speech sound perception, we expected that infants in their first half year of life would discriminate the vowels, in contrast to older infants whose non-native sound perception should deteriorate, at least in ID-like speech. Our results showed that infants of both age groups were able to discriminate the vowels in ID-like singing, while only the younger group discriminated the vowels in ID-like speech. These results show that infants process speech sound information in song from early on. They also hint at diverging perceptual or attentional mechanisms guiding infants’ sound processing in ID-speech vs. -singing towards the end of the first year of life

    An acoustic investigation of the developmental trajectory of lexical stress contrastivity in Italian

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    We examined whether typically developing Italian children exhibit adult-like stress contrastivity for word productions elicited via a picture naming task (n=25 children aged 3\u20135 years and 27 adults). Stimuli were 10 trisyllabic Italian words; half began with a weak\u2013strong (WS) pattern of lexical stress across the initial 2 syllables, as in patata, while the other half began with a strong\u2013weak (SW) pattern, as in gomito. Word productions that were identified as correct via perceptual judgement were analysed acoustically. The initial 2 syllables of each correct word production were analysed in terms of the duration, peak intensity, and peak fundamental frequency of the vowels using a relative measure of contrast\u2014the normalised pairwise variability index (PVI). Results across the majority of measures showed that children\u2019s stress contrastivity was adult-like. However, the data revealed that children\u2019s contrastivity for trisyllabic words beginning with a WS pattern was not adult-like regarding the PVI for vowel duration: children showed less contrastivity than adults. This effect appeared to be driven by differences in word-medial gemination between children and adults. Results are compared with data from a recent acoustic study of stress contrastivity in English speaking children and adults and discussed in relation to language-specific and physiological motor-speech constraints on production

    The relationship between maternal speech clarity and infant language outcomes

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    Mothers' use of infant-directed speech (IDS) may assist infants in decoding language input. IDS is characterized by exaggerated prosodic features (Fernald, 1989), shorter mean length of utterance (Cooper, 1997; Bernstein Ratner, 1996), repetition (Bernstein Ratner, 1996), and more highly clarified acoustic qualities (Bernstein Ratner, 1984; Malsheen, 1980) in comparison to speech directed to adults. However, it is not yet known to what extent such measures of maternal input have long-term impacts on language development. This thesis seeks to test the overarching hypothesis that children who receive more clarified speech input during the prelinguistic stage may be expected to have better language skills at an earlier age than children who receive poorer quality input

    Acoustic features of infant-directed speech to infants with hearing loss

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    Published Online: 03 December 2020This study investigated the effects of hearing loss and hearing experience on the acoustic features of infant-directed speech (IDS) to infants with hearing loss (HL) compared to controls with normal hearing (NH) matched by either chronological or hearing age (experiment 1) and across development in infants with hearing loss as well as the relation between IDS features and infants' developing lexical abilities (experiment 2). Both experiments included detailed acoustic analyses of mothers' productions of the three corner vowels /a, i, u/ and utterance-level pitch in IDS and in adult-directed speech. Experiment 1 demonstrated that IDS to infants with HL was acoustically more variable than IDS to hearing-age matched infants with NH. Experiment 2 yielded no changes in IDS features over development; however, the results did show a positive relationship between formant distances in mothers' speech and infants' concurrent receptive vocabulary size, as well as between vowel hyperarticulation and infants' expressive vocabulary. These findings suggest that despite infants' HL and thus diminished access to speech input, infants with HL are exposed to IDS with generally similar acoustic qualities as are infants with NH. However, some differences persist, indicating that infants with HL might receive less intelligible speech.This research was supported by HEARing Cooperative Research Centre Grant No. 82631, “The Seeds of Language Development,” to D.B. The second author's work is supported by the Basque Government through the BERC 2018-2021 program and by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the Ramon y Cajal Research Fellowship PID2019-105528GA-I00. We would like to thank all the parents and infants for participating in the study; “The Shepherd Centre” in Sydney and Wollongong; “Hear and Say” in Brisbane for their help in recruitment of participants with HL; and Benjawan Kasisopa, Maria Christou-Ergos, Hana Zjakic, and Scott O'Loughlin for their assistance with data collection

    Language and gender effects in the phonetics of parentese

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    Parentese is the typical register for talking to children. Its segment-marking prosody can disambiguate messages. This study documents acoustic-phonetic features of parentese in English and Dutch and compares male and female speakers. Speech rate was significantly lower; pitch and pitch modulation were significantly higher. Male and female 'parentese substyles' emerged

    The role of infant-directed speech in language development of infants with hearing loss

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    It is estimated that approximately two out of every 1000 infants worldwide are born with unilateral or bilateral hearing loss (HL). Congenital HL, which refers to HL present at birth, has major negative effects on infants’ speech and language acquisition. Although such negative effects can be mediated by early access to hearing devices and intervention, the majority of children with HL have delayed language development in comparison with their normal-hearing (NH) peers. The aim of this thesis was to provide a deeper empirical understanding of the acoustic features in infant-directed speech (IDS) to infants with HL compared to infants with NH of the same chronological and the same hearing age. The three specific objectives were set for this thesis. The first objective is to investigate the effects of HL and the degree of hearing experience on the acoustic features of IDS. The second objective is to assess adjustments in IDS features across development in IDS to infants with HL, as they acquire more hearing experience. The third objective is to evaluate the role of specific IDS components such as vowel hyperarticulation and exaggerated prosody in lexical processing in infants with NH from six to 18 months of age, at both neural and behavioural levels. This was achieved by conducting four experiments. The first experiment used a cross-sectional design that assessed the acoustic features in IDS to infants with HL with a specific focus on whether and how infants’ chronological age and hearing age may affect these features. Experiment 2 included a longitudinal investigation that focused on the acoustic features of IDS to infants with HL and infants with NH of the same hearing age. We sought to identify how infants’ changing linguistic needs may shape maternal IDS across development. Experiments 3 and 4 focused on lexical processing in six-, 10-, and 18-month-old infants, whereby we aimed to identify the role of specific IDS features in facilitating lexical processing in infants with NH at different stages of language acquisition. The results of this thesis demonstrated that mothers adjust their IDS to infants with HL in a similar manner as in IDS to infants with NH. However, some differences are evident in the production of the corner vowels /i/ and /u/. These differences exist even when controlling for the amount of hearing experience had by infants with HL. Additionally, findings demonstrated a relation between vowel production in IDS and infants’ receptive vocabulary indicating that the exaggeration in vowel production in maternal IDS may play a fostering role in infants’ language acquisition. This linguistic role was confirmed as vowel hyperarticulation was also found to facilitate lexical processing at the neural level in 10-month-old infants. However, with regard to older infants (18 months), our findings demonstrated that natural IDS with heightened pitch and vowel hyperarticulation represents the richest input that facilitates infants’ speech processing. In summary, the findings of this thesis suggest that congenital HL in infants affects maternal production of vowels in IDS resulting in less clear vowel categories. This may result from mothers adjusting their vowel production according to infants’ reduced vowel discrimination abilities, thus, adjusting their IDS to infants’ linguistic competence. Additionally, receptive vocabulary seems not to be affected by this, indicating the role of other cues for building a lexicon in infants with HL that warrant further investigation. Furthermore, the findings suggest that pitch and vowel hyperarticulation in IDS play significant roles in facilitating lexical processing in the first two years of life

    Contributions of Caregivers Interaction to Infant Attention

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    Research shows the way adults communicate with children can be classified into two main categories: Adult Directed Speech (ADS) and Infant Directed speech (IDS) (Schachner & Hannon, 2011). Past research focused on the maternal use of IDS; however, the current study investigated differences in maternal and paternal use of IDS. We hypothesize that 1) there will be a difference in the amount of paternal caregiving depending on mothers’ work status, 2) the acoustic properties of IDS will be influenced by the amount of parental involvement in caregiving activities, and 3) infants will pay more attention to parents who use more exaggerated IDS. No changes were found for paternal involvement when mothers were employed compared to when mothers were not employed. No relationships were found between IDS, parental involvement, or infants’ attention. These findings provide a better understanding of fathers’ contributions in caregiving and their influences on infants’ cognitive development
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