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The effect of lengthening aspiration on speech segmentation ...
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Production of nonce words to establish the cues for prominence and grouping in English ...
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Early Tashelhiyt Berber word segmentation: the role of the Possible Word Constraint ...
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Visual Speech Mitigates the Influence of Speech Rate on Speech Perception
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Lexical stress constrains English-learning infants' segmentation in a non-native language.
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Cascading Oscillators in Decoding Speech: Reflection of a Cortical Computation Principle
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British English infants segment words only with exaggerated infant-directed speech stimuli.
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Does Vocabulary Knowledge Affect Lexical Segmentation in Adverse Conditions? ...
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Bishell, Michelle. - : University of Canterbury. Department of Communication Disorders, 2015
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Does Vocabulary Knowledge Affect Lexical Segmentation in Adverse Conditions?
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Bishell, Michelle. - : University of Canterbury. Department of Communication Disorders, 2015
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Infants' Speech Segmentation: The Impact of Mother-Infant Facial Synchrony
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In: The Journal of Purdue Undergraduate Research (2014)
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Abstract:
Various measures of infant responsiveness have been shown to predict child outcomes. Despite this extensive research, there is no work examining links between infant responsiveness during caregiver-infant interactions with infants' ability to perform basic linguistic tasks. One key task in early linguistic development is word segmentation, an achievement that allows infants to build their mental dictionaries. We hypothesized that infants' responsiveness to caregiver facial expressions might be related to their word segmentation ability. In order to test this hypothesis, mothers came into the lab and were videotaped reading books containing target words to their 5-month-old children. After the infants were read to, we tested their listening preference for words in the books, as well as novel words; this test yielded a preference score (preference for familiar vs. unfamiliar words). We also used the videotaped reading to code facial expressions for both infant and caregiver, and subsequently, we tabulated occasions where synchronous facial expressions occurred for each member of the dyad. We then examined possible correlations between our preference score and measures gleaned from the dyadic facial expression coding. Although neither the number of infant-led synchronous facial expressions nor the total number of facial expressions produced by either member was significantly correlated with preference score, our measure of synchronous facial expressions led by the caregiver was highly correlated with preference score. Thus, results support the hypothesis that infant responsiveness during caregiver-infant interaction, as indexed by synchronous facial expressions with caregivers, may be related to language learning ability.
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Keyword:
development; facial expressions; facial synchrony; infant-caregiver interaction; reciprocity; speech perception; touch; word segmentation
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URL: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jpur/vol4/iss1/3 https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1121&context=jpur
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Infants generalize representations of statistically segmented words.
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WPP, No.111: Syllabification, Sonority, and Spoken Word Segmentation: Evidence from Word-Spotting
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In: Bishop, Jason; & Toda, Kristen. (2012). WPP, No.111: Syllabification, Sonority, and Spoken Word Segmentation: Evidence from Word-Spotting. UCLA: Department of Linguistics, UCLA. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2326q63g (2012)
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Rapid recognition at 10 months as a predictor of language development
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Prosodic structure in early word segmentation : ERP evidence from Dutch ten-month-olds
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