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Signal to Syntax
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Signal to Syntax book
Signal to Syntax
DOI link for Signal to Syntax
Signal to Syntax book
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ABSTRACT
In the beginning, before there are words, or syntax, or discourse, there is speech. Speech is an infant's gateway to language. Without exposure to speech, no language--or at most only a feeble facsimile of language--develops, regardless of how rich a child's biological endowment for language learning may be. But little is given directly in speech--not words, for example, as anyone who has ever listened to fluent conversation in an unfamiliar language can attest. Rather, words and phrases, or rudimentary categories--or whatever other information is required for syntactic and semantic analyses to begin operating--must be pulled from speech through an infant's developing perceptual capacities. By the end of the first year, an infant can segment at least some words from fluent speech. Beyond this, how impoverished or rich an infant's representations of input may be remains largely unknown. Clearly, in the debate over determinants of early language acquisition, the input speech stream has too often been offhandedly dismissed as a potential source of information.
This volume brings together internationally-known scholars from a range of disciplines--linguistics, psychology, cognitive and computer science, and acoustics --who share common interests in how speech, in its phonological, prosodic, distributional, and statistical properties, may encode information useful for early language learning, and how such information may be deciphered by very young children. These scholars offer a spectrum of viewpoints on the possibility that aspects of speech may provide bootstraps for language learning; contribute important, state-of-the-art findings across a variety of relevant domains; and illuminate critical directions for future inquiry. The publication of this volume represents a significant step in renewing the bonds between two fields that have long been sundered--speech perception and language acquisition.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
PART I: THE NATURE, PERCEPTION, AND REPRESENTATION OF INPUT SPEECH
chapter 5|18 pages
Combining Linguistic With Statistical Methods in Modeling Prosody
part |2 pages
PART II: SPEECH AND THE ACQUISITION OF WORDS
chapter 7|16 pages
Coping With Linguistic Diversity: The Infant's Viewpoint
chapter 8|18 pages
Models of Word Segmentation in Fluent Maternal Speech to Infants
chapter 9|16 pages
From ’’Signal to Syntax": But What Is the Nature of the Signal?
part |2 pages
PART III: SPEECH AND THE ACQUISITION OF GRAMMATICAL MORPHOLOGY & FORM CLASSES
chapter 13|18 pages
The Role of Prosody in the Acquisition of Grammatical Morphemes
chapter 14|16 pages
Deficits of Grammatical Morphology in Children with Specific Language Impairment and Their Implications for Notions of Bootstrapping
chapter 16|22 pages
Perceptual Bases of Rudimentary Grammatical Categories: Toward a Broader Conceptualization of Bootstrapping
part |2 pages
PART IV: SPEECH AND THE ACQUISITION OF PHRASE STRUCTURE
chapter 17|26 pages
Prosodic Cues to Syntactic and Other Linguistic Structures in Japanese, Korean, and English
chapter 18|18 pages
Can a Grammatical Parameter Be Set Before the First Word? Prosodic Contributions to Early Setting of a Grammatical Parameter
chapter 20|22 pages
Prosody in Speech to Infants: Direct and Indirect Acoustic Cues to Syntactic Structure
chapter 21|24 pages
Prosodic Bootstrapping: A Critical Analysis of the Argument and the Evidence
chapter 22|20 pages
Syntactic Units, Prosody, and Psychological Reality During Infancy
part |2 pages
PART V: SPEECH AND THE ACQUISITION OF LANGUAGE