Describe the growth of the tectorial membrane.
Tectorial membrane develops and matures by the end of gestation.
What are the implications for hearing in regards to tectorial membrane development?
Cochlear frequency sensitivity is not present until 30-35 weeks gestation due to development of tectorial membrane.
Low threshold signal detection and cochlear frequency selectivity are not evident until late stages of gestation.
When do we first hear?
Anatomic connections of the cochlea to brain are complete ~10-20 weeks before birth.
How does plasticity play a role in binaural hearing?
Medial and lateral nuclei of superior olive and medial nucleus of the trapezoid body receive input from both cochleas.
Unilateral hearing loss:
How is plasticity relevant for early intervention considerations?
Early hearing loss can impact binaural auditory development.
What can happen at the level of the cortex if hearing loss is present?
Cortex can be rewired and other modalities are recruited in place of the auditory modality.
How does speech perception develop from birth to 6 months?
Full-term newborns have over 2 months auditory experience.
What evidence is there to demonstrate that infants perceive suprasegmentals?
DeCasper & Spence (1986)
Granier-Deferre et al. (2011)
- Fetuses exposed to piano melody at 35-37 weeks showed memory of melody 6 weeks later
Kruger & Garvan (2014)
- 38 week fetuses demonstrated memory of nursery rhyme that was regularly presented from 28-34 weeks gestation
What is segmental information?
Acoustic properties of speech that differentiate phonemes
How do young infants perceive segmental information?
They demonstrate sensitivities to fine-grained changes in segmental info. despite lack of experience with high frequencies (filtering in utero)
How do infants perceive categorical information?
Infants may have some initial auditory sensitivity to particular acoustic-phonetic cues, but are not rigid and can be influenced by linguistic input
- Many consonant contrasts are perceived categorically but vowels are perceived more continuously
What are the effects of language experience on speech discrimination?
Younger infants can discriminate phonemic contrasts that are difficult for adults, but 10-12 month olds could only discriminate contrasts that were linguistically relevant
- This suggests that consonant discrimination is affected by language input
What is the Universalist view of language experience on speech discrimination?
Infants are born able to discriminate any phonemic contrast that could potentially be relevant to any of the world’s languages.
Then, with experience, they lose the ability to discriminate contrasts that are not relevant for their language
What are the limitations of the Universalist view?
Doesn’t take into consideration subphonemic info that is relevant for other aspects of speech perception and language acquisition
Some contrasts, rather than being discriminable universally during early infancy, require language experience before they can be discriminated
Recent work suggests that VOT boundaries shift to what is appropriate for the ambient language ~8-10 months of age (Burns et al., 2007, Hoonhorst et al., 2009,Liu & Kager, 2015)
What is recognition memory?
Recognition is a very basic form of learning
Examples of infant recognition memory for speech
-Preferences for mother’s voice & native language
Work with older infants suggests that infants’ representations of speech sounds become more generalizable with experience and development
What is associative learning?
Word learning is a sophisticated type of associative learning
In infancy, associative learning takes place in nonlinguistic domains prior to 1st words
- E.g., visual–correlations (large neck w/ large ears), objects’ parts, motion trajectories
In the auditory domain, young infants can learn simple associations–>Vocal affect & facial expressions
Older Infants associate complex strings of speech with objects, actions, attributes, & experiences
- Important for language acquisition
What is statistical learning?
Involves learning the probability of y given x
Infants are sensitive to the statistical properties of speech sounds in their language
Describe the pediatrician’s role as the medical home for children with HL.
Risk Factors for Neonatal and Late-onset HL