Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries i...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries in infant-directed speech: : Evidence from LENA recordings

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries in infant-directed speech: : Evidence from LENA recordings. / Wang, T.; Yu, E.C.; Huang, R. et al.
In: Journal of Child Language, Vol. 51, No. 5, 30.09.2024, p. 1193-1212.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Wang T, Yu EC, Huang R, Lany J. Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries in infant-directed speech: : Evidence from LENA recordings. Journal of Child Language. 2024 Sept 30;51(5):1193-1212. Epub 2023 Jun 23. doi: 10.1017/S030500092300034X

Author

Wang, T. ; Yu, E.C. ; Huang, R. et al. / Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries in infant-directed speech : : Evidence from LENA recordings. In: Journal of Child Language. 2024 ; Vol. 51, No. 5. pp. 1193-1212.

Bibtex

@article{f88bc97162cd4e71857f5d0a4b2de7c2,
title = "Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries in infant-directed speech: : Evidence from LENA recordings",
abstract = "Infant-directed speech (IDS) produced in laboratory settings contains acoustic cues, such as pauses, pitch changes, and vowel-lengthening that could facilitate breaking speech into smaller units, such as syntactically well-formed utterances, and the noun- and verb-phrases within them. It is unclear whether these cues are present in speech produced in more natural contexts outside the lab. We captured LENA recordings of caregiver speech to 12-month-old infants in daylong interactions (N = 49) to address this question. We found that the final positions of syntactically well-formed utterances contained greater vowel lengthening and pitch changes, and were followed by longer pauses, relative to non-final positions. However, we found no evidence that these cues were present at utterance-internal phrase boundaries. Results suggest that acoustic cues marking the boundaries of well-formed utterances are salient in everyday speech to infants and highlight the importance of characterizing IDS in a large sample of naturally-produced speech to infants.",
author = "T. Wang and E.C. Yu and R. Huang and J. Lany",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1017/S030500092300034X",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "1193--1212",
journal = "Journal of Child Language",
issn = "0305-0009",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Acoustic cues to phrase and clause boundaries in infant-directed speech

T2 - : Evidence from LENA recordings

AU - Wang, T.

AU - Yu, E.C.

AU - Huang, R.

AU - Lany, J.

PY - 2024/9/30

Y1 - 2024/9/30

N2 - Infant-directed speech (IDS) produced in laboratory settings contains acoustic cues, such as pauses, pitch changes, and vowel-lengthening that could facilitate breaking speech into smaller units, such as syntactically well-formed utterances, and the noun- and verb-phrases within them. It is unclear whether these cues are present in speech produced in more natural contexts outside the lab. We captured LENA recordings of caregiver speech to 12-month-old infants in daylong interactions (N = 49) to address this question. We found that the final positions of syntactically well-formed utterances contained greater vowel lengthening and pitch changes, and were followed by longer pauses, relative to non-final positions. However, we found no evidence that these cues were present at utterance-internal phrase boundaries. Results suggest that acoustic cues marking the boundaries of well-formed utterances are salient in everyday speech to infants and highlight the importance of characterizing IDS in a large sample of naturally-produced speech to infants.

AB - Infant-directed speech (IDS) produced in laboratory settings contains acoustic cues, such as pauses, pitch changes, and vowel-lengthening that could facilitate breaking speech into smaller units, such as syntactically well-formed utterances, and the noun- and verb-phrases within them. It is unclear whether these cues are present in speech produced in more natural contexts outside the lab. We captured LENA recordings of caregiver speech to 12-month-old infants in daylong interactions (N = 49) to address this question. We found that the final positions of syntactically well-formed utterances contained greater vowel lengthening and pitch changes, and were followed by longer pauses, relative to non-final positions. However, we found no evidence that these cues were present at utterance-internal phrase boundaries. Results suggest that acoustic cues marking the boundaries of well-formed utterances are salient in everyday speech to infants and highlight the importance of characterizing IDS in a large sample of naturally-produced speech to infants.

U2 - 10.1017/S030500092300034X

DO - 10.1017/S030500092300034X

M3 - Journal article

VL - 51

SP - 1193

EP - 1212

JO - Journal of Child Language

JF - Journal of Child Language

SN - 0305-0009

IS - 5

ER -