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Can comprehenders use prosody to interpret potential indirect requests? ...
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Testing the Gleam-Glum Effect with the Bouba-Kiki Paradigm (Adult) ...
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The effect of non-adjacent phonological overlap on naming: A picture-word interference task ...
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The relationship between phrasing and prominence in Mandarin production ...
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Phonetic variation reveals variation in phonological planning scope ...
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The role of empathy and proficiency in the perception and processing of second language prosody ...
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Rise-fall-rise - Auditory Dialogue Rating Study (conaddRating) ...
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The iambic trochaic law in actual words: The case of English ...
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The scope of phonological planning during online speech production ...
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Size Sound Symbolism in Mothers' Speech to their Infants ...
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Abstract:
Six-month-olds infer object size based on pitch: high-pitched sounds map onto smaller objects and low-pitched sounds onto larger objects (Fernández-Prieto, Navarra, & Pons, 2015). The ‘sound symbolism bootstrapping hypothesis’ (Imai & Kita, 2014) proposes that this might support early understanding of correspondences between words and their meanings; by drawing on iconic pairings between prosodic or segmental cues in language and their corresponding referents (e.g. high pitch to represent smaller objects), infants can begin to develop their understanding of the association between words and their referents, first through iconic cases and later for more arbitrary associations. An understanding of iconic form-meaning pairings is established from an early age: at four months, Spanish-learning infants already make associations between pitch and object size (Peña, Mehler, & Nespor, 2011), suggesting a ‘primitive capacity’ for sound symbolic form-meaning correspondences in language. However, for this ...
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Keyword:
First and Second Language Acquisition; FOS Languages and literature; iconicity; infant-directed speech; Linguistics; Phonetics and Phonology; pitch; Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics; Social and Behavioral Sciences; sound symbolism
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URL: https://osf.io/84mqj/ https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/84mqj
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