2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.01.08.425949
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Speech-like sounds dominate the human infant vocal landscape

Abstract: Early human infant vocalization is viewed as forming not only a critical foundation for vocal learning of language, but also a crucial realm of communication affecting emotional and social development. Although speech-like sounds are rare or absent in other ape infants, they share distress sounds (shrieks and cries) and laughter with humans, forming a potential basis for especially informative cross-species comparisons as well as potential insights regarding usage and learning of vocal sounds. A fundamental ne… Show more

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“…The remarkable speed of this development has been the subject of decades of intense research efforts (Oller, 1980(Oller, , 2000Jusczyk, 1997;de Boysson-Bardies, 2001). Infant cries, once believed a possible precursor of speech (Lester and Boukydis, in press), are no longer considered as such (Nathani et al, 2006;Oller et al, 2013Oller et al, , 2021. Rather, protophones, infant speech-like utterances including vowel-like sounds and melodic non-cry vocalizations, appearing even before the onset of babble, represent a substantially greater proportion of infant utterances (Stark, 1980;Hsu et al, 2000;Jang et al, 2019;Oller et al, 2021;Wermke et al, 2021) and are considered likely precursors of phonemes proper (Oller, 1980;Koopmans-van Beinum and Stelt, 1986).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The remarkable speed of this development has been the subject of decades of intense research efforts (Oller, 1980(Oller, , 2000Jusczyk, 1997;de Boysson-Bardies, 2001). Infant cries, once believed a possible precursor of speech (Lester and Boukydis, in press), are no longer considered as such (Nathani et al, 2006;Oller et al, 2013Oller et al, , 2021. Rather, protophones, infant speech-like utterances including vowel-like sounds and melodic non-cry vocalizations, appearing even before the onset of babble, represent a substantially greater proportion of infant utterances (Stark, 1980;Hsu et al, 2000;Jang et al, 2019;Oller et al, 2021;Wermke et al, 2021) and are considered likely precursors of phonemes proper (Oller, 1980;Koopmans-van Beinum and Stelt, 1986).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%