Biomechanically preferred consonant-vowel combinations fail to appear in adult spoken corpora.
Douglas H. Whalen,Sara Giulivi,Sara Giulivi,Hosung Nam,Andrea G. Levitt,Andrea G. Levitt,Pierre A. Hallé,Pierre A. Hallé,Louis Goldstein,Louis Goldstein +9 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that spoken frequencies of CV combinations can differ from dictionary (type) counts and that the CV preferences apparent in babbling are biomechanically driven and can ignore the frequencies of CVs in the ambient spoken language.
read more
Abstract: Certain consonant/vowel (CV) combinations are more frequent than would be expected from the individual C and V frequencies alone, both in babbling and, to a lesser extent, in adult language, based on dictionary counts: Labial consonants cooccur with central vowels more often than chance would dictate; coronals co-occur with front vowels, and velars with back vowels (Davis & MacNeilage, 1994). Plausible biomechanical explanations have been proposed, but it is also possible that infants are mirroring the frequency of the CVs that they hear. As noted, previous assessments of adult language were based on dictionaries; these "type" counts are incommensurate with the babbling measures, which are necessarily "token" counts. We analyzed the tokens in two spoken corpora for English, two for French and one for Mandarin. We found that the adult spoken CV preferences correlated with the type counts for Mandarin and French, not for English. Correlations between the adult spoken corpora and the babbling results had all three possible outcomes: significantly positive (French), uncorrelated (Mandarin), and significantly negative (English). There were no correlations of the dictionary data with the babbling results when we consider all nine combinations of consonants and vowels. The results indicate that spoken frequencies of CV combinations can differ from dictionary (type) counts and that the CV preferences apparent in babbling are biomechanically driven and can ignore the frequencies of CVs in the ambient spoken language.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
The emergence of phonetic–phonological features in a biologically inspired model of speech processing
Bernd J. Kröger,Mengxue Cao +1 more
TL;DR: It can be hypothesized from findings that the phonetic–phonological interface does not appear as a clean cut within the speech processing system but as a broader zone within that system located between sensorimotor and semantic processing.
20
From babbling to first words in Tashlhiyt language acquisition: longitudinal two-case studies
Mohamed Lahrouchi,Sophie Kern +1 more
TL;DR: The authors evaluated the role of biomechanical constraints on babbling and first word production in two children acquiring Tashlhiyt, a Berber language spoken in Morocco, and found strong similarities observed between the two groups of children.
Response to MacNeilage and Davis and to Oller
TL;DR: The authors' results show substantial support for the Articulatory Phonology (AP) account, and a closer look at feeding in infants shows substantial control of the tongue and lips, casting further doubt on the foundation of the F/C account.
•Dissertation
Babillage et diversification alimentaire : pratiques et influence de l'exposition aux textures sur le contrôle oro-moteur
Leslie Lemarchand
- 26 Feb 2019
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse the trajectories developpement of 14 enfants francais over a period of 10 and 14 months, in order to investigate the interdependance unilaterale entre les activites de parole and alimentation.
6
References
The Emergence of the Speech Capacity
D. Kimbrough Oller
TL;DR: Recent studies of infant vocal development reveal new insights into the emergence of speech capacity, proposing an infrastructural model that explains how well-formed speech units are constructed and how infant vocalizations mature into language, with implications for understanding language evolution and communicative disorders.
From Babbling to Speech: A Re-Assessment of the Continuity Issue
TL;DR: The authors evaluated Jakobson's arguments for discontinuity on the basis of data on the transition from babbling to speech in a single set of children recorded weekly in two contexts: mother-child interaction and solitary play.
Computational simulation of CV combination preferences in babbling
TL;DR: The results indicate that the underlying assumptions of the F/C model are not supported and that the AP account provides a better and account with broader coverage by showing that articulatory synergies influence all CV syllables, not just the most common ones.