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      Infants' First Words are not Phonetically Specified: Own Name Recognition in British English-Learning 5-Month-Olds

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      Infancy
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Comparison of parametric representations for monosyllabic word recognition in continuously spoken sentences

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            Speech perception in infants.

            Discriminiationi of synthetic speech sounds was studied in 1- and 4-month-old infants. The speech sounds varied along an acoustic dimension previously shown to cue phonemic distinctions among the voiced and voiceless stop consonants in adults. Discriminability was measured by an increase in conditioned response rate to a second speech sound after habituation to the first speech sound. Recovery from habituation was greater for a given acoustic difference when the two stimuli were from different adult phonemic categories than when they were from the same category. The discontinuity in discrimination at the region of the adult phonemic boundary was taken as evidence for categorical perception.
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              At 6-9 months, human infants know the meanings of many common nouns.

              It is widely accepted that infants begin learning their native language not by learning words, but by discovering features of the speech signal: consonants, vowels, and combinations of these sounds. Learning to understand words, as opposed to just perceiving their sounds, is said to come later, between 9 and 15 mo of age, when infants develop a capacity for interpreting others' goals and intentions. Here, we demonstrate that this consensus about the developmental sequence of human language learning is flawed: in fact, infants already know the meanings of several common words from the age of 6 mo onward. We presented 6- to 9-mo-old infants with sets of pictures to view while their parent named a picture in each set. Over this entire age range, infants directed their gaze to the named pictures, indicating their understanding of spoken words. Because the words were not trained in the laboratory, the results show that even young infants learn ordinary words through daily experience with language. This surprising accomplishment indicates that, contrary to prevailing beliefs, either infants can already grasp the referential intentions of adults at 6 mo or infants can learn words before this ability emerges. The precocious discovery of word meanings suggests a perspective in which learning vocabulary and learning the sound structure of spoken language go hand in hand as language acquisition begins.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Infancy
                Infancy
                Wiley-Blackwell
                15250008
                May 2017
                May 02 2017
                : 22
                : 3
                : 362-388
                Article
                10.1111/infa.12151
                bc200862-924c-4214-9af3-f45bec47e3d7
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

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