“…For instance, it has been proposed that both these features, despite appearing to counteract each other, may be consistent with acoustic adjustments aimed at facilitating language teaching (Eaves, Feldman, Griffiths, & Shafto, ). In addition, infants have been shown to benefit from exposure to exaggerated versus non‐exaggerated vowels in experiments assessing vowel perception (Peter, Kalashnikova, Santos, & Burnham, ; Zhang et al, ) and lexical processing (Song, Demuth, & Morgan, ). Moreover, the degree to which individual mothers hyperarticulate vowels in IDS is positively related to their infants’ concurrent and later linguistic abilities: Mothers who exaggerate vowels to a greater extent have infants who are more successful in discriminating native phonetic contrasts at the ages of 6–8 and 10–12 months (Liu, Kuhl, & Tsao, ) and have infants who have larger vocabulary sizes in the second year of life (Hartman, Ratner, & Newman, ; Kalashnikova & Burnham, ).…”