1972
DOI: 10.1037/h0032197
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Auditory-linguistic sensitivity in early infancy.

Abstract: Three investigations are reported which indicate that infants between four and seventeen weeks of age are able to detect sorne differences in sounds upon which phonemic contrasts are based. using a procedure where the presentation of sound was contingent on non-nutritive sucking, the babies demonstrated their ability to detect the difference be-tween /b/ and /p/ and between /d/ and /t/. The implications of these findings for Jakobson's theory of phonemic development are discussed.

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Cited by 95 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…A similar conclusion was expressed by Streeter and Landauer (1976) in the interpretation of their finding that Kikuyu children were able to discriminate VOT contrasts lying in the region of the English contrast (i.e., + 10 vs. +40 msec VOT) without experience with that acoustic-phonetic contrast. It is noteworthy that the strongest evidence for infant discrimination of synthetic stop consonants that contrast in VOT also occurs for contrasts which bracket the English phoneme boundary (Eilers, Gavin, & Wilson, 1979;Eimas, 1975;Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk, & Vigorito, 1971;Trehub & Rabinovitch, 1972). Infant discrimination of degrees of voicing lead have been difficult to demonstrate (Eilers et aI., 1979;Lasky, Syrdal-Lasky, & Klein, 1975;Streeter, 1976), except for infants from a language in which voicing lead is phonemic.…”
Section: Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar conclusion was expressed by Streeter and Landauer (1976) in the interpretation of their finding that Kikuyu children were able to discriminate VOT contrasts lying in the region of the English contrast (i.e., + 10 vs. +40 msec VOT) without experience with that acoustic-phonetic contrast. It is noteworthy that the strongest evidence for infant discrimination of synthetic stop consonants that contrast in VOT also occurs for contrasts which bracket the English phoneme boundary (Eilers, Gavin, & Wilson, 1979;Eimas, 1975;Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk, & Vigorito, 1971;Trehub & Rabinovitch, 1972). Infant discrimination of degrees of voicing lead have been difficult to demonstrate (Eilers et aI., 1979;Lasky, Syrdal-Lasky, & Klein, 1975;Streeter, 1976), except for infants from a language in which voicing lead is phonemic.…”
Section: Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Provocative early findings in infant speech perception indicated that mechanisms responsible for patterns of voicing perception are functional at a very early age ͑Eimas et al., 1971;Trehub and Rabinovich, 1972͒. Moreover, experience appears to play a relatively minor role in shaping voicing discrimination early in development ͑Lasky et al, 1975;Streeter, 1976͒. Lasky et al ͑1975͒, for example, found that infants from a Spanish-speaking environment discriminate differences in VOT if stimuli straddle either the Spanish ͑lead versus short-lag͒ or the English ͑short-lag versus longlag͒ VOT boundary but show little evidence of discrimination otherwise.…”
Section: A Auditory Discontinuities In Temporal Processingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, as we indicated earlier in the paper, infant speech perception research suggested that a change in memory for phonetic information occurs sometime after 2 months. Infants as young as 1 month can detect a contrast in place of articulation (e.g., /b/ vs. /d/), or in voice onset time (e.g., /p/ vs. fbi), for a variety of consonants, as long as the syllables are presented at a rapid rate (short lSI) of 1 or Usec (e.g., Cutting & Eimas, 1975;Eimas, Siqueland, Juszcyk, & Vigorito, 1971;Trehub & Rabinovitch, 1972). Infants this young, however, apparently fail at detecting the same phonetic contrasts if the ISIs are lengthened, so that short-term retention of stimulus properties is required.…”
Section: Early Age Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%