Thiessen Erik D, Hill Emily A, Saffran Jenny R
Department of Psychology Carnegie Mellon University.
Department of Psychology and Waisman Center University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Infancy. 2005 Jan;7(1):53-71. doi: 10.1207/s15327078in0701_5. Epub 2005 Jan 1.
There are reasons to believe that infant-directed (ID) speech may make language acquisition easier for infants. However, the effects of ID speech on infants' learning remain poorly understood. The experiments reported here assess whether ID speech facilitates word segmentation from fluent speech. One group of infants heard a set of nonsense sentences spoken with intonation contours characteristic of adult-directed (AD) speech, and the other group heard the same sentences spoken with intonation contours characteristic of ID speech. In both cases, the only cue to word boundaries was the statistical structure of the speech. Infants were able to distinguish words from syllable sequences spanning word boundaries after exposure to ID speech but not after hearing AD speech. These results suggest that ID speech facilitates word segmentation and may be useful for other aspects of language acquisition as well. Issues of direction of preference in preferential listening paradigms are also considered.
有理由相信,面向婴儿的(ID)言语可能会使婴儿更容易习得语言。然而,ID言语对婴儿学习的影响仍知之甚少。此处报告的实验评估了ID言语是否有助于从流畅言语中进行单词切分。一组婴儿听了一组带有成人导向(AD)言语语调特征的无意义句子,另一组婴儿听了同样的句子,但带有ID言语的语调特征。在这两种情况下,单词边界的唯一线索是言语的统计结构。婴儿在接触ID言语后能够从跨越单词边界的音节序列中区分出单词,但在听到AD言语后则不能。这些结果表明,ID言语有助于单词切分,也可能对语言习得的其他方面有用。还考虑了偏好性听力范式中的偏好方向问题。