Oller D K, Eilers R E
Mailman Center for Child Development, University of Miami, Fl 33101.
Child Dev. 1988 Apr;59(2):441-9.
The traditional belief that audition plays only a minor role in infant vocal development depends upon evidence that deaf infants produce the same kinds of babbling sounds as hearing infants. Evidence in support of this position has been very limited. A more extensive comparison of vocal development in deaf and hearing infants indicates that the traditional belief is in error. Well-formed syllable production is established in the first 10 months of life by hearing infants but not by deaf infants, indicating that audition plays an important role in vocal development. The difference between babbling in the deaf and hearing is apparent if infant vocal sounds are observed from a metaphonological perspective, a view that takes account of the articulatory/acoustic patterns of speech sounds in all mature spoken languages.
传统观念认为,听觉在婴儿语音发展中仅起次要作用,这一观念基于这样的证据:失聪婴儿发出的咿呀学语声与听力正常的婴儿相同。支持这一观点的证据非常有限。对失聪和听力正常婴儿语音发展的更广泛比较表明,传统观念是错误的。听力正常的婴儿在出生后的前10个月就能发出结构完整的音节,而失聪婴儿则不能,这表明听觉在语音发展中起着重要作用。如果从元音位学的角度观察婴儿的语音,即考虑所有成熟口语中语音的发音/声学模式,就会发现失聪婴儿和听力正常婴儿咿呀学语的差异很明显。