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Vocal development in a large‐scale crosslinguistic corpus
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In: ISSN: 1363-755X ; EISSN: 1467-7687 ; Developmental Science ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03498978 ; Developmental Science, Wiley, 2021, 24 (5), ⟨10.1111/desc.13090⟩ (2021)
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Describing Vocalizations in Young Children: A Big Data Approach Through Citizen Science Annotation
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In: ISSN: 1092-4388 ; EISSN: 1558-9102 ; Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03498946 ; Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2021, 64 (7), pp.2401-2416. ⟨10.1044/2021_JSLHR-20-00661⟩ (2021)
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Quantifying Sources of Variability in Infancy Research Using the Infant-Directed-Speech Preference
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Quantifying Sources of Variability in Infancy Research Using the Infant-Directed-Speech Preference
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In: ISSN: 2515-2459 ; EISSN: 2515-2467 ; Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science ; https://hal-univ-rennes1.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02509817 ; Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science, [Thousand Oaks]: [SAGE Publications], 2020, 3 (1), pp.24-52. ⟨10.1177/2515245919900809⟩ (2020)
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What Do North American Babies Hear? A large-scale cross-corpus analysis.
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BabbleCor: A Crosslinguistic Corpus of Babble Development in Five Languages ...
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The INTERSPEECH 2019 computational paralinguistics challenge: Styrian dialects, continuous sleepiness, baby sounds & orca activity
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Vocal and Tactile Input to Children Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing
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In: J Speech Lang Hear Res (2019)
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English-learning infants’ perception of word stress patterns
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The impact of brief restriction to articulation on children's subsequent speech production
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Touch Screen Assessment of At-risk Infant Comprehension
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In: Theses and Dissertations Available from ProQuest (2018)
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What Do North American Babies Hear? A large-scale cross-corpus analysis
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Why the Body Comes First: Effects of Experimenter Touch on Infants' Word Finding
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In: Faculty Journal Articles (2015)
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Asymmetry of onsets and codas in language acquisition: Implications for phonological theories
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In: Theses and Dissertations Available from ProQuest (2015)
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The Edge Factor in Early Word Segmentation: Utterance-Level Prosody Enables Word Form Extraction by 6-Month-Olds
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Abstract:
Past research has shown that English learners begin segmenting words from speech by 7.5 months of age. However, more recent research has begun to show that, in some situations, infants may exhibit rudimentary segmentation capabilities at an earlier age. Here, we report on four perceptual experiments and a corpus analysis further investigating the initial emergence of segmentation capabilities. In Experiments 1 and 2, 6-month-olds were familiarized with passages containing target words located either utterance medially or at utterance edges. Only those infants familiarized with passages containing target words aligned with utterance edges exhibited evidence of segmentation. In Experiments 3 and 4, 6-month-olds recognized familiarized words when they were presented in a new acoustically distinct voice (male rather than female), but not when they were presented in a phonologically altered manner (missing the initial segment). Finally, we report corpus analyses examining how often different word types occur at utterance boundaries in different registers. Our findings suggest that edge-aligned words likely play a key role in infants’ early segmentation attempts, and also converge with recent reports suggesting that 6-month-olds’ have already started building a rudimentary lexicon.
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Keyword:
Research Article
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24421892 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083546 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3885442
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