| Babies Seem to Know Where Words Begin and End | |
WASHINGTON -- When do babies start to understand words as words? A series of
eight experiments with infants has provided evidence that even at
eight-and-a-half months, they seem sensitive to word boundaries. The experiments
are described in the June issue of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human
Perception and Performance, published by the American Psychological Association
(APA).
Psychologists Sven Mattys, Ph.D., and Peter Jusczyk, Ph.D., of the departments
of psychology and cognitive science at Johns Hopkins University investigated how
babies find the beginnings and ends of words in utterances. Specifically, would
infants sometimes incorrectly group the end of one word with the beginning of
another word? For example, would babies respond to the sound of "dice" within
"cold ice" or "red ice" in the same way they would respond to "dice" in "two
dice"?
Mattys and Jusczyk used the widely validated "head turn preference procedure,"
in which infants sit in a three-sided booth on their caretaker's lap. A green
light flashes in front when they look ahead in "rest" position. To start the
experiment, a computer-controlled red light flashes on either the left or right
side of the booth, drawing the infant's attention. A concealed loudspeaker
behind that light plays the experimental word or passage. A hidden observer
watches the infant through a peephole, recording for how long the infant listens
to the sample (in other words, looks at the red light associated with the
loudspeaker).
Mattys and Jusczyk tested two dozen infants in each of their experiments. The
youngest infants were about eight-and-a-half months old. First they
"familiarized" an infant to certain words by having the infant listen to at
least 30 seconds of a female sing-song voice repeating those words over and over
as the infant watched the flashing red light. This entered the word in the
infant's memory. Second, in the test phase, the researchers played one of three
types of recorded passages. "Target-present" passages contained the actual
target word. "Misparsed" passages contained the same sound sequences as the
targets, but the sounds occurred between two successive words. For example,
infants familiarized to the word "dice" might then get a passage of either, "Two
dice can be rolled without difficulty" (target present) or "Weird ice no longer
surprises anyone" (misparsed). Control group ("target absent") passages included
completely unrelated sounds -- to continue the example above, "Crib oats were
rather mysterious until recently."
The researchers compared how long the infants paid attention to the different
types of samples. "Infants seem to be more interested when they can pick up
something they recognize as familiar amidst the new words of the passages," says
Mattys. "It's as if you heard your name in a conversation at a table next to
yours." The infants showed a listening preference for passages with the target
present ("two dice") passages, but not for the misparsed ("weird ice") passages
as compared with the target-absent ("crib oats") passages. This result indicates
that they were sensitive to word-boundary cues.
In their article, Mattys and Jusczyk also discuss the various speech cues that
allow infants to know when words begin and end, such as rhythmic cues (where the
accent falls in a word) and allophonic cues (the way that particular sounds are
pronounced when they occur in different positions of a word; for example, a "t"
at the beginning of a word is pronounced differently from a "t" at the end of a
word). They found that English-learning infants were considerably delayed in
their ability to segment words that start with vowels instead of consonants,
indicating that although word-segmentation capacities start relatively early,
the full development of these capacities is a gradual process extending well
into the second year. The infants studied failed to segment words starting with
vowels until 16 months of age. Fewer spoken words start with vowels, which
provide more subtle acoustic cues than the more explosive consonant sounds.
Mattys and Jusczyk state that the full development of word-segmentation
capacities may start relatively young but they require well into the second year
to develop.
Article: "Do Infants Segment Words or Recurring Contiguous Patterns?", Sven L.
Mattys and Peter W. Jusczyk, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.; Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2001, Vol. 27, No.
3.
Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office and
after June 13 at
http://www.apa.org/journals/xhp/xhp273644.html
---American Psychological Association
Back to The Science of Mental Health
Articles in The Science of Mental Health are written by the originating institution. This article was originally posted to Newswise. Newswise maintains a comprehensive database of news releases from top institutions engaged in scientific, medical, liberal arts and business research. The friendly interface allows you to search, browse or download any article or abstract.
