Article published In: Annual Review of Language Acquisition: Volume 1 (2001)
Edited by Lynn Santelmann, Maaike Verrips and Frank Wijnen
[Annual Review of Language Acquisition 1] 2001
► pp. 65–118
Phonological theory and the development of prosodic structure
Evidence from child Japanese
Published online: 19 October 2001
https://doi.org/10.1075/arla.1.03ota
https://doi.org/10.1075/arla.1.03ota
This article presents a model of prosodic structure development that takes account of the fundamental continuity between child and adult systems, the surface level divergence of child forms from their adult target forms, and the overall developmental paths of prosodic structure. The main empirical base for the study comes from longitudinal data collected from three Japanese-speaking children (1; 0–2; 6). Evidence for word-internal prosodic constituents including the mora and the foot is found in compensatory lengthening phenomena, syllable size restrictions and word size restrictions in early word production. By implementing the representational principles that organize these prosodic categories as rankable and violable constraints, Optimality Theory can provide a systematic account of the differences in the prosodic structure of child and adult Japanese while assuming representational continuity between the two. A constraint-based model of prosodic structure acquisition is also shown to demarcate the learning paths in a way that is consistent with the data.
Cited by (7)
Cited by seven other publications
Kehoe, Margaret M.
2018. Prosodic phonology in acquisition. In The Development of Prosody in First Language Acquisition [Trends in Language Acquisition Research, 23], ► pp. 165 ff.
Tilsen, Sam
Miyakoda, Haruko & Setsuko Imatomi
Jae Yung Song & Katherine Demuth
Demuth, Katherine & Mark Johnson
Miyakoda, Haruko
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 14 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
