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Wiley InterScience

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PAPER
Twenty-two-month-olds discriminate fluent from disfluent adult-directed speech
Melanie Soderstrom 1 and James L. Morgan 1
  1. Department of Cognitive & Linguistic Sciences, Brown University, USA
Address for correspondence: Melanie Soderstrom, Department of Cognitive & Linguistic Sciences, Brown University Box 1978, 190 Thayer St., Providence, RI 02912, USA; e-mail: melsod@brown.edu
Copyright © 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

ABSTRACT

Deviation of real speech from grammatical ideals due to disfluency and other speech errors presents potentially serious problems for the language learner. While infants may initially benefit from attending primarily or solely to infant-directed speech, which contains few grammatical errors, older infants may listen more to adult-directed speech. In a first experiment, Post-verbal infants preferred fluent speech to disfluent speech, while Pre-verbal infants showed no preference. In a second experiment, Post-verbal infants discriminated disfluent and fluent speech even when lexical information was removed, showing that they make use of prosodic properties of the speech stream to detect disfluency. Because disfluencies are highly correlated with grammatical errors, this sensitivity provides infants with a means of filtering ungrammaticality from their input.


Received: 19 January 2006 Accepted: 30 August 2006

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-7687.2006.00605.x About DOI

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Developmental Psychology