Children’s Use of Uptalk in Narratives

Yujia Song, Cynthia G. Clopper, Laura Wagner
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Abstract

Uptalk refers to the use of rising intonation on declarative utterances. Previous research has shown that, at age 6 years, children use rising contours with declaratives more frequently than adults, and this pattern appears to persist until 14 years of age. However, it is unclear why such a trend persists. To gain a clearer developmental picture of uptalk, the present study analyzed the form and function of uptalk produced by children aged 6 to 7 and 10 to 11 years from the American Midwest, using a storytelling task. Contrary to previous findings, the results indicate that children of both age groups use uptalk in an adult-like way: they overwhelmingly favor L-H% over H-H% boundary tones, and most strongly associate the contour with continuation. The lack of age differences suggests that children’s use of uptalk is comparable to that of adults by the age of 6, at least in certain narrative contexts. The use of a familiar storytelling task in the current study may explain the greater success observed for children than in previous studies, suggesting the relative importance of the elicitation task in the investigation of child speech.
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儿童在叙事中的上升语运用
升调是指在陈述句中使用升调。先前的研究表明,在6岁时,儿童使用上升等高线的陈述比成年人更频繁,这种模式似乎一直持续到14岁。然而,目前尚不清楚为什么这种趋势会持续下去。为了更清楚地了解向上说话的发展情况,本研究通过一个讲故事的任务,分析了美国中西部6 ~ 7岁和10 ~ 11岁儿童向上说话的形式和功能。与之前的发现相反,结果表明,两个年龄组的儿童都以成年人的方式使用向上的谈话:他们压倒性地喜欢L-H%而不是H-H%的边界音调,并且最强烈地将轮廓与延续联系起来。没有年龄差异表明,至少在某些叙事背景下,儿童使用向上谈话的能力与6岁的成年人相当。在当前的研究中,使用一个熟悉的讲故事任务可能解释了在儿童中观察到的比以前的研究更大的成功,这表明在儿童语言研究中,启发任务的相对重要性。
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