• DocumentCode
    312263
  • Title

    The acoustic structure of vowels in mothers´ speech to infants and adults

  • Author

    Andruski, Jean E. ; Kuhl, Parricia K.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Speech & Hearing Sci., Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
  • Volume
    3
  • fYear
    1996
  • fDate
    3-6 Oct 1996
  • Firstpage
    1545
  • Abstract
    Research has shown that exposure to a specific language alters infants´ perception of vowel sounds by the time they reach 6 months of age. This raises the important question of how infants develop language-specific patterns of vowel perception from the language-general pattern they appear to be born with. Language spoken to infants may exert an important influence in this regard. The present study compares the acoustic structure of vowels in the words “sheep” and “shoes” produced by 10 mothers in conversation with their infants, with their acoustic structure when produced by the same 10 women in conversation with an adult. Mothers were instructed to play with their infants using a toy sheep and pair of shoes. They were asked to use the same words in conversation with an adult. The infant-directed tokens exhibited higher F0, greater pitch excursions and longer duration than the adult-directed tokens, as is typical of motherese. Although F0 was significantly higher in infant-directed vowels, F1 remained at essentially the same frequency as in adult-directed /i/ and /u/. In contrast, F2 was significantly higher in infant-directed /i/ and significantly lower in infant-directed /u/ than in the adult-directed tokens. Thus, the infant-directed tokens reached more extreme acoustic targets. The formant structure also indicated an equivalent or slightly greater degree of coarticulation of infant-directed /u/ with the preceding fricative in “shoes”. Overall, mothers in the study consistently hyperarticulated vowels in speech to infants
  • Keywords
    linguistics; speech; speech processing; F0 parameter; acoustic structure; acoustic targets; adult-directed tokens; adults; coarticulation; conversation; duration; hyperarticulated vowels; infant-directed tokens; infants; language-specific patterns; mother speech; motherese; pitch excursions; shoes; toy sheep; vowel sound perception; vowels; Acoustic devices; Auditory system; Footwear; Frequency; History; Humans; Magnetic separation; Natural languages; Pediatrics; Speech;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Spoken Language, 1996. ICSLP 96. Proceedings., Fourth International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Philadelphia, PA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-3555-4
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICSLP.1996.607913
  • Filename
    607913