Meier R P, McGarvin L, Zakia R A, Willerman R
Department of Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin 78712, USA.
Phonetica. 1997;54(3-4):153-71. doi: 10.1159/000262219.
Early babbling has been characterized as being fundamentally a mandibular oscillation: the infant's repeated lowering and raising of its mandible yields a perceived contrast between consonants produced in a closed vocal tract configuration and vowels produced with an open tract. We wondered whether babblers produce rhythmic mandibular oscillations without phonation and, if so, whether there might be a relationship between such 'jaw wags' and early speech. We report two studies: the first is a longitudinal, observational study of 14 infants, some of whom were hearing and some Deaf. Seven infants (3 hearing, 3 Deaf, and 1 hearing-impaired) produced numerous speech-like, rhythmic jaw wags without phonation; sometimes jaw wags formed a single utterance with phonated babbling. Most jaw wags reported here were produced when these infants were ages 8-13 months. The second study, a survey of 90 parents of 4- to 10-month-old hearing infants, suggests that silent babbles may be a widespread phenomenon of early speech development.
婴儿反复降低和抬起下颌,使得在声道闭合状态下发出的辅音与声道张开时发出的元音之间形成了一种可感知的对比。我们想知道牙牙学语的婴儿是否会在不发声的情况下产生有节奏的下颌摆动,如果是这样,这种“下巴摆动”与早期语言之间是否可能存在某种关系。我们报告两项研究:第一项是对14名婴儿进行的纵向观察研究,其中一些婴儿听力正常,一些是聋儿。七名婴儿(3名听力正常、3名聋儿和1名听力受损)在不发声的情况下产生了大量类似语音的有节奏的下巴摆动;有时下巴摆动与发声的牙牙学语形成一个单一的话语。这里报告的大多数下巴摆动是这些婴儿在8至13个月大时产生的。第二项研究是对90名4至10个月大听力正常婴儿的父母进行的调查,结果表明无声的牙牙学语可能是早期语言发展中的一种普遍现象。