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Perceptual assimilation of regionally accented Mandarin lexical tones by native Beijing Mandarin listeners
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AusKidTalk : an auditory-visual corpus of 3- to 12-year-old Australian children's speech
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Novel word learning deficits in infants at family risk for dyslexia. ...
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Maternal Depression Affects Infants’ Lexical Processing Abilities in the Second Year of Life
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In: Brain Sci (2020)
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Acoustic features of infant-directed speech to infants with hearing loss
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Infant-directed speech to infants at risk for dyslexia : a novel cross-dyad design
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Maternal depression affects infants' lexical processing abilities in the second year of life
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Novel word learning deficits in infants at family risk for dyslexia
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The role of paired associate learning in acquiring letter-sound correspondences : a longitudinal study of children at family risk for dyslexia
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Sensitivity to amplitude envelope rise time in infancy and vocabulary development at 3 years: A significant relationship. ...
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Sensitivity to amplitude envelope rise time in infancy and vocabulary development at 3 years: A significant relationship.
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Abstract:
Here we report, for the first time, a relationship between sensitivity to amplitude envelope rise time in infants and their later vocabulary development. Recent research in auditory neuroscience has revealed that amplitude envelope rise time plays a mechanistic role in speech encoding. Accordingly, individual differences in infant discrimination of amplitude envelope rise times could be expected to relate to individual differences in language acquisition. A group of 50 infants taking part in a longitudinal study contributed rise time discrimination thresholds when aged 7 and 10 months, and their vocabulary development was measured at 3 years. Experimental measures of phonological sensitivity were also administered at 3 years. Linear mixed effect models taking rise time sensitivity as the dependent variable, and controlling for non-verbal IQ, showed significant predictive effects for vocabulary at 3 years, but not for the phonological sensitivity measures. The significant longitudinal relationship between amplitude envelope rise time discrimination and vocabulary development suggests that early rise time discrimination abilities have an impact on speech processing by infants. ; Australian Research Council
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Keyword:
Child; Female; Humans; Infant; Language Development; Longitudinal Studies; Male; Preschool; Speech; Speech Perception; Vocabulary
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URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/292800 https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.39956
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Delayed development of phonological constancy in toddlers at family risk for dyslexia
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Lexical tone perception in infants and young children : empirical studies and theoretical perspectives
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Sensitivity to amplitude envelope rise time in infancy and vocabulary development at three years : a significant relationship
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Atypical cortical entrainment to speech in the right hemisphere underpins phonemic deficits in dyslexia. ...
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Mothers speak differently to infants at-risk for dyslexia. ...
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