Infant talkers and infant listeners
With Linda Polka, School of Communication Sciences & Disorders, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Info about event
Time
Location
Building 1481, room 366
Time & Venue: 12th June 2018, 3.15 pm, room 366, budiling 1481.
Abstract
Over the past four decades we have learned a great deal about how infants perceive and decode the speech spoken around them and directed to them. Yet we know very little about how infants perceive their own vocalizations or speech with the unique vocal properties of an infant talker. This leaves a serious gap in our understanding of infant language development. In this talk I will present findings from a new line of research that begins to address this neglected aspect of infant speech development by exploring how infants perceive speech with infant vocal properties. The findings suggest that access to infant speech has a broad and significant impact - influencing receptive, expressive, and motivational aspects of speech development.