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Vocal development in a large‐scale crosslinguistic corpus
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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Vocal development in a large-scale crosslinguistic corpus.
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3
Phonetic development in an agglutinating language
Cychosz, Margaret E.. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2020
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4
The INTERSPEECH 2019 computational paralinguistics challenge: Styrian dialects, continuous sleepiness, baby sounds & orca activity
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The Contribution of Functional Load on Children's Vocalic Development
In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2017 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2019)
Abstract: Children's phonology is replete with regular, predictable phenomena that nevertheless differ from adults. Discrepancies between adult and child speech cannot solely be attributed to environmental input, so immature motor development is often cited. Normally-developing children quickly acquire the motor skills and segment planning necessary to avoid these "errors." But phonological development continues well into late-childhood. For example, age and segment duration/variability are negatively correlated in English and French. Here we present contradictory data from Chuquisaca Quechua that show children producing shorter vowel durations than adults and attribute this to the role of functional load (FL). Interest in FL as an explanatory device for phoneme merger and segment inventories has recently resurfaced, but extension of the metric to phonological acquisition has been limited. FL is an important concept to apply to children's speech development because children's relatively smaller lexicons may lead them to make different generalizations regarding the relative importance of certain phonological contrasts. We test this hypothesis in Chuquisaca Quechua, a language where we predict maximal distinctiveness between adult and child lexica due to the language's morphological structure. We find that FL addresses this developmental pattern in the children's vowels.
Keyword: acquisition; functional load; L1 phonology; morphology; Quechua
URL: https://doi.org/10.3765/amp.v5i0.4250
http://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/amphonology/article/view/4250
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6
Collection Guide
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Berkeley Field Methods: South Bolivian Quechua ...
Escobar, Efrain; Cychosz, Margaret; Hayes, Dmetri. - : California Language Archive, University of California, Berkeley, 2018
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8
Functional load and frequency predict consonant emergence across five languages
In: Cychosz, Margaret. (2017). Functional load and frequency predict consonant emergence across five languages. UC Berkeley Phonology Lab Annual Reports, 13(1). Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/0vp1p7dp (2017)
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9
Speaking Quechua Poem
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10
Elicitation on Bolivian recipes
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11
Zoo story
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12
Grammatical elicitation on relative clauses
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13
Elicitation of words (ch-i)
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14
The Couple Story
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15
Directionals
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Directionals
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17
Eliciting leyendas y historias bolivianas
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18
Ideophones continued
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Song and poem repetitions
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Elicitation of Focus
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