The study examines whether speakers exaggerate prosodic cues to syntactic structure when addressing young children. In four experiments, 72 mothers and 48 non-mothers addressed either real 2-4-year old or imaginary children as well as adult confederates using syntactically ambiguous sentences like Touch the cat with the spoon intending to convey either an instrument (high attachment) or a modifier (low attachment) interpretation. Mothers produced longer segments and pauses in child-directed speech (CDS) compared to adult-directed speech (ADS). However, in CDS, mothers lengthened post-nominal pauses in both the instrument and the modifier sentences to a similar extent thereby failing to disambiguate between the two interpretations. In contra...
Experienced language users are able to predict when conversational turns approach completion, which ...
Prior studies of ambiguity resolution in young children have found that children rely heavily on lex...
Social interaction is integral to language acquisition (Kitamura & Burnham, 2003; Snow, 1989). A key...
This study examines prosodic disambiguation in child-directed (CD) speech. Twenty-four mothers addre...
We investigate the role of prosody in child-directed speech of three English speaking adults using d...
Child-directed speech has long been known to influence children’s vocabulary learning. However, whil...
Purpose: The present study examined the effects of age and hearing status of a child on maternal use...
Children’s initial syntactic acquisition tasks include finding clausal and phrasal units from contin...
The purpose of the present study was to compare three prosodic features of IDS with ADS using natur...
This study explored if the quality of mothers’ reported child-rearing experiences influences the pro...
It is often thought that the ability to use prosodic features accurately is mastered in early childh...
Studies with adult listene rs have demonstrated that prosody, lexical information and referential ev...
Child-directed speech (CDS) is the speech style used by mothers, fathers, and others to talk to an i...
This production study builds on and extends the research on how prosodic cues can be used to resolve...
This study examined 4-year-old Mandarin-speaking children's sensitivity to prosodic cues in resolvin...
Experienced language users are able to predict when conversational turns approach completion, which ...
Prior studies of ambiguity resolution in young children have found that children rely heavily on lex...
Social interaction is integral to language acquisition (Kitamura & Burnham, 2003; Snow, 1989). A key...
This study examines prosodic disambiguation in child-directed (CD) speech. Twenty-four mothers addre...
We investigate the role of prosody in child-directed speech of three English speaking adults using d...
Child-directed speech has long been known to influence children’s vocabulary learning. However, whil...
Purpose: The present study examined the effects of age and hearing status of a child on maternal use...
Children’s initial syntactic acquisition tasks include finding clausal and phrasal units from contin...
The purpose of the present study was to compare three prosodic features of IDS with ADS using natur...
This study explored if the quality of mothers’ reported child-rearing experiences influences the pro...
It is often thought that the ability to use prosodic features accurately is mastered in early childh...
Studies with adult listene rs have demonstrated that prosody, lexical information and referential ev...
Child-directed speech (CDS) is the speech style used by mothers, fathers, and others to talk to an i...
This production study builds on and extends the research on how prosodic cues can be used to resolve...
This study examined 4-year-old Mandarin-speaking children's sensitivity to prosodic cues in resolvin...
Experienced language users are able to predict when conversational turns approach completion, which ...
Prior studies of ambiguity resolution in young children have found that children rely heavily on lex...
Social interaction is integral to language acquisition (Kitamura & Burnham, 2003; Snow, 1989). A key...