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Language Development Hearing Children

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Pitch, intonation appeared to be more important than the words. Intonation patterns include both high and low pitch. Mothers Talking ... Brown and Hanlon (1970) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Language Development Hearing Children


1
Language Development Hearing Children
2
Pre-linguistic Development
  • Preverbal child is a social being
  • During the first year, the child is actively
    processing information

3
Pre-linguistic Development
  • Interactions between adults and infants
  • Shorter sentences
  • Fewer verbs, modifiers and function words
  • Fewer verb forms (tenses)
  • Concrete vocabulary
  • Prosodic elements
  • Pitch, intonation appeared to be more important
    than the words
  • Intonation patterns include both high and low
    pitch

4
Mothers Talking to Babies
  • Simple language structures
  • Fewer passive and complex sentence constructions
  • Avoiding sentences with deep structures that are
    different than the surface structures
  • However, the mothers language is significantly
    more complex than the childs

5
Mothers Talking to Infants continued
  • Brown and Hanlon (1970)
  • 30 of the sentences used by mothers were simple,
    affirmative, declarative structures
  • 70 were complicated with a variety of richness
  • Children were attentive to utterances slightly
    above their level
  • Mothers used language similar to what their
    children would use 1 year later

6
Mothers Talking continued
  • Repetition is common
  • Differences in pitch and intonation
  • Infants respond best to high pitch
  • Infants begin to mimic intonation patterns by 6
    months

7
The Infant
  • Attentive infants become
  • Quiet
  • Turn toward speaker
  • Establish eye contact
  • Gaze coupling
  • Resembles adult conversational turn taking
  • Infants are not passive
  • They do react to speech

8
Mother-infant interactions
  • 3 months, infants show vocal responsiveness to
    vocal and visual stimulation from their mothers,
    less from strangers
  • How the infant reacts influences how the adult
    responds
  • Adults know the child does not understand but act
    as though the infant does understand

9
Mother-infant interactions continued
  • Mothers respond to both verbal and nonverbal
    behaviors (smiles, burps, vocalizations) and
    incorporated these behaviors into the
    conversation
  • Mothers treated these behaviors as intentional
    and treated them as turns in the interaction
  • Mothers would pause to provide an opportunity to
    respond
  • As the child becomes older, 7 months, mothers
    accepted only higher quality vocalizations such
    as babbling
  • At 12 months, mothers attempted to interpret the
    childs vocalizations as words.

10
Mother-Infant Interactions
  • Early language input of adults influences childs
    vocalizations
  • Intentional communication markers
  • Gesture, point, eye contact
  • Vocalize consistent sounds and intonation
    patterns
  • Persistent in attempts at communication and will
    repeat and change behavior to communicate more
    clearly

11
2 Types of Communication
  • Pre-verbal child
  • Protodeclarative
  • Child uses an object o gain the adults attention
  • Protoimperative
  • Child gets another person to do something

12
Factors Influencing the First Words
  • Between 2½ to 4½ vocabulary grows at 2-4 words
    per day
  • Influences
  • 1. Words adults use
  • Labeling
  • Categorizing
  • 2. Modified speech and language input
  • Cleary enunciated, slower
  • Wider range of pitch and intonation
  • Clear pauses

13
Factors, Continued
  • Adults use concrete topics
  • -Reduced vocabulary
  • -More content words
  • -Fewer verbs, modifiers, pronouns, and function
    words
  • -Repetition of key words
  • 4. Adults provide feedback
  • -on how well they represent their intention

14
Vocabularies
  • First 50 words include words from variety of
    grammatical classes
  • Nominals most common
  • Action words
  • Modifiers
  • Personal social words
  • Function words

15
Production and Comprehension
  • Expressive vocabulary lags behind receptive
    vocabulary

16
Attribution
  • Children begin to use adjectives as single-word
    utterances ages 16 to 21 months
  • Ages 21 months and older, children use adjectives
    in two-word utterances.
  • However, the two word combinations were used as
    nominals not to differentiate between objects

17
Color Words
  • Conceptual knowledge required
  • Isolate color from objects
  • Differentiate among hues
  • Notice similarities among related shades
  • Linguistic knowledge required
  • Recognizing that color words refer to the
    dimension of color

18
Later Semantic Development
  • Vocabulary size may not be an indicator of
    semantic sophistication
  • Vocabulary size does not increase in a strictly
    linear manner
  • Semantic development includes establishing
    semantic networks (schemata)
  • Word meanings are in a constant state of change,
    modified by continued experience
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