Term
acquiring speech depends on --------- before production |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
hearing and more hearing, receiving, and interpreting sound and other stimuli |
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Term
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Definition
identification of speech sounds requires discrimination and localization |
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Term
when can infants start to distinguish difference between many sounds |
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Definition
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Term
What can infants distinguish? |
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Definition
their mom's voice vs. others human voices vs. mechanical voices pitch differences some very different phonemes |
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Term
how is infant perception studied? |
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Definition
heart rate high amplitude sucking reinforced head turning |
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Term
---------- almost always precedes production |
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Definition
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Term
Developmental Stage of infant speech prd. STAGE 1 |
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Definition
Quasi-Resonant Nucleus Stage aka: phonation |
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Term
Stage 1 of Infant Speech Production Reflexive-Vegitative Stage Describe 2 components |
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Definition
Reflexive
- in response to outside stimuli
- vowel like cry
- non-speech
- high front vowel
- limited resonance due to reduced oral cavity space-tongue movement
Vegitative
- same /k/, /g/, and some nasal
- all sounds still have some nasality
- most sounds at back of mouth
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Term
Stage II- Coo and Goo
When?
Characterized by?
phoneme pattern?
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Definition
- 6 weeks-4 months
- char. by "cooing" and laughter sounds which indicate better control of larynx and repsiration sys.
- increased resonance- still primarily vowel- like but some consonant- like sounds emergin
- early cooing-> C...V...C...CVCV
- constriction in vocal tract-> consnant-like sounds (pre-consonants)-> and increased resonance-> vowel-like
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Term
Stage III Exploratory/Expansion Stage
aka?
When?
What are they producing?
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Definition
- vocal play and Expansion
- 4-6 months
- increased control of respiration, larynx, tongue ,and lips
- now producing "phones"
- increased frequency of "lip sounds"
At 6-7 months
- begins to vocalize w/intent
- parents increase responsiveness
- kids listen to themselves
- deaf children decrease vocal play
- raspberries
- marginal babbling CV,VC syllables
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Term
STAGE IV Reduplicated Babbling Stage
aka?
7-11 months
what does it sound like?
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Definition
- Canonical Babbling
- 7-11 months
- begins to sound from a native speaker
- starts to use the sunds of the lang.
- sounds become more like those the kid is exposed to
- exhibits prosody, inflection, linguistic stress
- non-native sounds begin to drop out
- which may be the first evidence that they are using what they hear to shape what they are doing
- increased perios of interaction between kid and parent
- CV syllables become longer
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Term
STAGE V- Variegated Babbling Stage
when?
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Definition
- 11-14 months
- use of varied consonants and vowels w/in a single vocalization
- child begins to use sounds/vocalizations that seem to be related to meaning
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Term
Protowords
What kind of form?
etc
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Definition
- phonologically consistent form
- increased specificity than early babbling
- seem related to specific action/object
- increased inflection, more adult-like but not real words
- may occur in isolation or w/in continuous speech
- They aren't words but result from further increase in phonetic stability
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Term
Syllables and how they develop |
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Definition
- important unit in early sound development
- CV- consonant/vowel- Universal element of lang.
- easy to perceive early and produce early
- most kids learn to produce consonants in the initial position of syllables
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Term
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Definition
a stable phonetic form used consistently
- a phonetically similar to adult word form of a particular lang.
- ex. aba for car= protoword
- ka for car= word
- initially true words for a kid
- single syllable
- redup. syllable
- open syllable (more than closed)
- initial manner
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Term
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Definition
mastery
- criteria varies but basically it's when most kids that age can produce the target sound (usually consonants)
phonology of the first 50 words at 18 months
- 90% of kids produce /m/, /b/, /d/
- 60% of kids produce /k/, /g/, /n/, /w/
- 50% of kids produce /h/, /p/, /t/
- 33% of kids produce /sh/, /s/ tch/, /d/, /f/
- few produce /l/, /r/, /z/
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