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Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Vol.44 1189-1200 December 2001. doi:10.1044/1092-4388(2001/092)
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Developmental Change in Auditory Preferences for Speech Stimuli in Japanese Infants

Akiko Hayashi 1
Yuji Tamekawa 1

Shigeru Kiritani 2

1 The Research Institute for the Education of Exceptional Children Tokyo Gakugei University Japan
2 Institute of Cognitive Sciences in Languages and Cultures Kobe Kaisei College Kobe, Japan

aki{at}u-gakugei.ac.jp

The developmental change in auditory preferences for speech stimuli was investigated for Japanese infants aged 4–14 months old. We conducted three experiments using two speech pairs in the head-turn preference procedure. Infant-directed (ID) speech and adult-directed (AD) speech stimuli were used in a longitudinal study (Experiment 1) and a cross-sectional study (Experiment 2). Native (Japanese) and non-native (English) speech stimuli were used in a cross-sectional study (Experiment 3). In all experiments, infants demonstrated a developmental change in their listening preference. For the ID/AD speech pair used in Experiments 1 and 2, infants show a U-shaped developmental shift with three developmental stages: Stage 1, in which very young infants tend to prefer ID speech over AD speech; Stage 2, in which the preference for ID speech decreases temporarily; and Stage 3, in which older infants again show a consistent preference for ID speech. For the native/non-native speech pair, there is a tendency for an increased preference for native speech over non-native speech, although infants did not demonstrate a U-shaped pattern. The difference in developmental pattern between the two types of speech pairs was discussed.

KEY WORDS: auditory preference, Japanese infants, developmental change, speech perception, longitudinal study

Submitted on November 9, 1999
Accepted on August 31, 2001


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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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