what do children need to learn (to learn human speech)? (3)
phonemes & minimal pairs can be distinguihsed via>
-aspiration (e.g. in eng allophonic ‘pin’ vs not in ‘spin; sometimes phonemic)
-tone (i.e. mandarin)
phonotatics=
what sounds can be combined within words, within a specific lang
(e.g. in eng cant start with “nt”)
Production before the first word involves> (4)>
-vegetative sounds
-cooing and laughter
-vocal play
-babbling
2 types of vegetative sounds>
-crying
-burping
what are vegetative sounds>
vocal folds vibrate, airflow is started and stopped
^more of a reflex
features of cooing and laughter> (3)
-as a sign of happiness and content in social interaction
-long vowels develop into a variety of vowels
- as more voluntary, with attempt of positive response of carefivers
what is vocal play?>
when children play around with more sounds (experimenting with VT & tongue)
features of vocal play> (2)
Problems with idea (16-30 weeks) infants produce ‘all sounds of world’s lang’?> (3)
babbling=
first syllables produced & combined
2 main types of babbling>
1>reduplicated/repetitive (dada)
2>variegated/non-repetitive (dadi)
reduplicated/repetive babbling=
e.g. ‘dada’
variegated/non-repetitive babbling=
e.g. [dadi]
features of babbling> (3)
cross-ling differences in babbling> (3)
-french speaking adults can distinguish french & chinese babies babbling mainly based on prosody
- frecnh babies produce more nasal sounds than eng babies
- more commonalities than differences across langs (vowels as easier for all children)
protowords=
specific sounds consistently used for specific meanings & in specific contexts
production of first words involve: (2)
-sound inventoy at end of babling phase (11 consonants, no clusters, no /l/ or /r/)
- phonological processes: deletion (kul for school) and reduplication (baba for bottle)
what is the phonological process of deletion?
when some sounds are deleted from a word in infants use of it (/kul/ for “school”)
what is the phonological process of reduplication?
when babies repeat sounds for words (e.g. /baba/ for bottle)
Phonological development> word position>
/d/ & /p/ in word initial vs word-final makes a difference (for some easier in either)
Main factors affecting production> (3)
Methods of testing comprehension> (2)
comprehension: high amplitude sucking technique> (4)