Some organization principles in early speech development

Author(s):  
Jordan R. Green ◽  
Ignatius S. B. Nip
2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela T. Morgan ◽  
Leenke van Haaften ◽  
Karen van Hulst ◽  
Carol Edley ◽  
Cristina Mei ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-33
Author(s):  
Douglas F. Parham

A rich area of research is the question of how infants learn to use the respiratory system to produce increasingly complex utterances during the first 2 years of life. Understanding infant speech-related breathing is foundational to properly describing human speech development. This article serves as a brief introduction to research on speech-related breathing in infancy. The goal of this summary article is to provide a springboard—and an invitation—for researchers interested in pursuing the respiratory aspects of early speech development.


Author(s):  
Florien Koopmans-van Beinum ◽  
Jeannette van der Stelt

1998 ◽  
Vol 41 (5) ◽  
pp. 1171-1184 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Snow

When young children produce multiword utterances and words that are polysyllabic in adult speech, they are most likely to omit unstressed syllables. Because unstressed syllables are omitted more often in weak-strong (iambic) than in strong-weak (trochaic) environments, a trochaic metrical theory has been proposed to account for the asymmetrical omission pattern. This paper presents an alternative explanation based on the notion of relative prosodic prominence. I propose that syllable prominence is a product of two orthogonal suprasegmental systems: one that marks stress/accent peaks and one that marks phrase boundaries. A two-component scale of prominence values reflecting the contributions of both systems was used to analyze single- and multi-word speech samples of 11 children 19 to 26 months of age. The results show that the prominence scale parsimoniously accounts not only for the bias toward syllable omissions in nontrochaic environments but also explains other types of syllable reduction not captured by metrical theories. Implications of the dual-system prosodic model are discussed in terms of possible contributions to a perceptually based theory of early polysyllabic and multiword patterns in child speech.


2015 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-126
Author(s):  
Jana Kesselová

Abstract In the framework of the natural morphology (The types of homomorphism; J. Dolník, 2005) and cognitive linguistics (the dative case as the grammatical exponent of the target person’s role; E. Dąbrowska, 1997), the paper deals with the dative case in early speech development (during the first 3 years of child’s life). The study presents the results of the research into grammatical forms, case meanings and pragmatic functions. The key question is this: which dative case structures children acquire preferentially? The research is based on the combination of qualitative (audiovisual recordings of three children, coding of transcripts) and quantitative (1065 parental assessments) methods. The research leads to conclusions on three levels: (a) The form: grammatical forms of the dative case with segmental and defective homomorphism are typical for preferentially acquired forms. (b) The semantics: dative of benefit and dative of direction can be interpreted as case meanings that create the core of the dative case’s early semantics. (c) The pragmatics: children use the dative case preferentially in utterances with pragmatic function: con-situational information, disagreement, answer, will and challenge. It means that the dative case is primarily used in the developmentally oldest functions. The research broadens the understanding of speech ontogenesis and contributes to language explanation that is compatible with the process of its acquisition.


2009 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 133-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura S. DeThorne ◽  
Cynthia J. Johnson ◽  
Louise Walder ◽  
Jamie Mahurin-Smith

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