2019
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01340
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Reliability of Listener Judgments of Infant Vocal Imitation

Abstract: There are many theories surrounding infant imitation; however, there is no research to our knowledge evaluating the reliability of listener perception of vocal imitation in prelinguistic infants. This paper evaluates intra- and inter-rater judgments on the degree of “imitativeness” in utterances of infants below 12 months of age. 18 listeners were presented audio segments selected from naturalistic recordings to represent in each case a parent vocal model followed by an infant utterance ranging from low to hig… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, parents may attend to any unique type of spontaneously produced protophone-irrespective of the communicative intent-and adapt their behavior to promote continued production of that particular sound, creating the appearance of, or perhaps initiating engagement with the infant. Indeed, we have reported evidence suggesting caregivers pay greatest attention to salient vocal signals such as those occurring in imitation, even though vocal imitation is surprisingly rare in the first year [69]. Caregivers, and thus people in general, may be inclined to overestimate the proportion of salient vocal signals such as imitation or immediate responses in protoconversation since it seems likely these are the sounds to which parents attend the most.…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 91%
“…Furthermore, parents may attend to any unique type of spontaneously produced protophone-irrespective of the communicative intent-and adapt their behavior to promote continued production of that particular sound, creating the appearance of, or perhaps initiating engagement with the infant. Indeed, we have reported evidence suggesting caregivers pay greatest attention to salient vocal signals such as those occurring in imitation, even though vocal imitation is surprisingly rare in the first year [69]. Caregivers, and thus people in general, may be inclined to overestimate the proportion of salient vocal signals such as imitation or immediate responses in protoconversation since it seems likely these are the sounds to which parents attend the most.…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 91%
“…Without vocal turn-taking, infants would not learn to participate in and contribute to protoconversation ( Gratier and Devouche, 2011 ; Yoo et al, 2018 ). Without infant active participation in protoconversation, using vocalizations with VFF, systematic vocal imitation of new forms would not be possible ( Jones, 2009 ; Long et al, 2019 ). Without these kinds of foundations, words and sentences could never be developed.…”
Section: The Critical Nature Of Vocal Functional Flexibility In Langumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Attempts to experimentally show such imitation are fraught with ambiguities of interpretation as to whether the infant imitates or the parent induces and/or follows the infant's vocal explorations, a kind of following that can yield a false impression of representational imitation on the part of the infant. A systematic attempt to identify auditorily recognizable cases of infant vocal imitation for research on listener judgments of degree of imitativeness yielded no more than a handful of clear cases out of over 6000 utterances drawn from recordings of mother-infant interaction, with fewer than 5% showing any discernible imitation [29]. The cases that did show some discernible imitation included apparent matching of subtle prosodic features subject to notable coder disagreement regarding imitativeness.…”
Section: Background and Rationalementioning
confidence: 99%