In:The Development of Prosody in First Language Acquisition
Edited by Pilar Prieto and Núria Esteve-Gibert
[Trends in Language Acquisition Research 23] 2018
► pp. 145–164
Chapter 8Early development of intonation
Perception and production
Published online: 24 May 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/tilar.23.08fro
https://doi.org/10.1075/tilar.23.08fro
This chapter focuses on early development of intonation. Together
with a precocious sensitivity to prosody documented in the
literature, recent research has shown that infants’ early perception
of pitch-based categories is already language-specific by 4–5
months, and that their discrimination abilities differ not only
according to ambient language but also as a function of pitch
properties (e.g., pitch direction, or pitch alignment). On the
production side, and focusing on studies within the
Autosegmental-Metrical framework, findings suggest that key
landmarks in intonational development precede and constrain the
acquisition of other aspects of grammar (e.g., word and phrase size,
and combinatorial speech). Both from a perception and production
point of view, language specific effects emerge very early on in
development, underlying cross-linguistic differences.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Early perception of intonation
- Perception of native intonation
- Perception of Non-native Intonation
- Emerging intonation in production
- Acquiring the phonological inventory of tonal events
- Acquiring the phonetics of intonation
- Conclusion
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