SummaryLanguage is the most important faculty that distinguishes humans from other animals. Infants learn their native language fast and effortlessly during the first years of life, as a function of the linguistic input in their environment. Behavioral studies reported the discrimination of melodic contours [1] and stress patterns [2, 3] in 1–4-month-olds. Behavioral [4, 5] and brain measures [6–8] have shown language-independent discrimination of phonetic contrasts at that age. Language-specific discrimination, however, has been reported for phonetic contrasts only for 6–12-month-olds [9–12]. Here we demonstrate language-specific discrimination of stress patterns in 4-month-old German and French infants by using electrophysiological brain ...
Language acquisition has long been discussed as an interaction between biological preconditions and ...
In this chapter the early acquisition of word stress is discussed. This study is aimed at examining ...
Contains fulltext : 5993.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)One critical aspe...
SummaryLanguage is the most important faculty that distinguishes humans from other animals. Infants ...
Several studies have demonstrated that infants are sensitive to prosodic cues from birth on and use ...
Language acquisition crucially depends on the ability of the child to segment the incoming speech st...
This study focuses on the development of lexical stress perception during the first year of life. Pr...
During the first months of life, human infants process phonemic elements from all languages similarl...
Monolingual infants start learning the prosodic properties of their native language around 6 to 9 mo...
Language acquisition has long been discussed as an interaction between biological preconditions and ...
During the first year of life, infants begin to have difficulties perceiving non-native vowel and co...
Abstract Language discrimination is one of the core differences between bilingual and monolingual la...
The present study is part of the German Lanugage Development Study (GlaD, www.glad-study.de). The Gl...
The capacity to acquire language is believed to be deeply embedded in our biology. As such, it has b...
The initial stages of language learning involve a critical interaction between infants' environmenta...
Language acquisition has long been discussed as an interaction between biological preconditions and ...
In this chapter the early acquisition of word stress is discussed. This study is aimed at examining ...
Contains fulltext : 5993.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)One critical aspe...
SummaryLanguage is the most important faculty that distinguishes humans from other animals. Infants ...
Several studies have demonstrated that infants are sensitive to prosodic cues from birth on and use ...
Language acquisition crucially depends on the ability of the child to segment the incoming speech st...
This study focuses on the development of lexical stress perception during the first year of life. Pr...
During the first months of life, human infants process phonemic elements from all languages similarl...
Monolingual infants start learning the prosodic properties of their native language around 6 to 9 mo...
Language acquisition has long been discussed as an interaction between biological preconditions and ...
During the first year of life, infants begin to have difficulties perceiving non-native vowel and co...
Abstract Language discrimination is one of the core differences between bilingual and monolingual la...
The present study is part of the German Lanugage Development Study (GlaD, www.glad-study.de). The Gl...
The capacity to acquire language is believed to be deeply embedded in our biology. As such, it has b...
The initial stages of language learning involve a critical interaction between infants' environmenta...
Language acquisition has long been discussed as an interaction between biological preconditions and ...
In this chapter the early acquisition of word stress is discussed. This study is aimed at examining ...
Contains fulltext : 5993.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)One critical aspe...