Carnegie Mellon University Library Publishing Service
Doi
Abstract
The present study examines the acoustic properties of infant-directed speech (IDS) as compared to adult-directed speech (ADS) in Norwegian parents of 18-month-old toddlers, and whether
these properties relate to toddlers’ expressive vocabulary size. Twenty-one parent-toddler dyads from
Tromsø, Northern Norway participated in the study. Parents (16 mothers, 5 fathers), speaking a Northern Norwegian dialect, were recorded in the lab reading a storybook to their toddler (IDS register), and
to an experimenter (ADS register). The storybook was designed for the purpose of the study, ensuring
identical linguistic contexts across speakers and registers, and multiple representations of each of the
nine Norwegian long vowels. We examined both traditionally reported measures of IDS: pitch, pitch
range, vowel duration and vowel space expansion, but also novel measures: vowel category variability
and vowel category distinctiveness. Our results showed that Norwegian IDS, as compared to ADS, had
similar characteristics as in previously reported languages: higher pitch, wider pitch range, longer
vowel duration, and expanded vowel space area; in addition, it had more variable vowel categories.
Further, parents’ hyper-pitch, that is, the within-parent increase in pitch in IDS as compared to ADS,
and lower vowel category variability in IDS itself, were related to toddlers' vocabulary. Our results point
towards potentially facilitating roles of increase in parents’ pitch when talking to their toddlers and of
consistency in vowel production in early word learning