A cross-linguistic examination of young children's everyday language experiences.

IF 1.7 2区 文学 Q1 LINGUISTICS Journal of Child Language Pub Date : 2024-09-24 DOI:10.1017/S030500092400028X
John Bunce, Melanie Soderstrom, Elika Bergelson, Celia Rosemberg, Alejandra Stein, Florencia Alam, Maia Julieta Migdalek, Marisa Casillas
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Abstract

We present an exploratory cross-linguistic analysis of the quantity of target-child-directed speech and adult-directed speech in North American English (US & Canadian), United Kingdom English, Argentinian Spanish, Tseltal (Tenejapa, Mayan), and Yélî Dnye (Rossel Island, Papuan), using annotations from 69 children aged 2-36 months. Using a novel methodological approach, our cross-linguistic and cross-cultural findings support prior work suggesting that target-child-directed speech quantities are stable across early development, while adult-directed speech decreases. A preponderance of speech from women was found to a similar degree across groups, with less target-child-directed speech from men and children in the North American samples than elsewhere. Consistently across groups, children also heard more adult-directed than target-child-directed speech. Finally, the numbers of talkers present in any given clip strongly impacted children's moment-to-moment input quantities. These findings illustrate how the structure of home life impacts patterns of early language exposure across diverse developmental contexts.

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对幼儿日常语言经验的跨语言研究。
我们利用 69 名 2-36 个月大的儿童的注释,对北美英语(美国和加拿大)、英国英语、阿根廷西班牙语、Tseltal(Tenejapa,玛雅语)和 YélîDnye(Rossel 岛,巴布亚语)中的目标儿童引导言语和成人引导言语的数量进行了探索性跨语言分析。我们采用新颖的方法论,跨语言和跨文化的研究结果支持了之前的研究,即目标儿童引导的言语数量在早期发育过程中保持稳定,而成人引导的言语数量则会减少。我们发现,在不同群体中,女性的言语占优势的程度相似,而在北美样本中,男性和儿童的目标儿童导向言语少于其他地区。同样,在不同群体中,儿童听到的成人引导性言语多于目标儿童引导性言语。最后,在任何特定片段中,说话者的人数都会对儿童每时每刻的输入量产生很大影响。这些发现说明了家庭生活结构如何影响儿童在不同发展环境中的早期语言接触模式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
4.50%
发文量
142
期刊介绍: A key publication in the field, Journal of Child Language publishes articles on all aspects of the scientific study of language behaviour in children, the principles which underlie it, and the theories which may account for it. The international range of authors and breadth of coverage allow the journal to forge links between many different areas of research including psychology, linguistics, cognitive science and anthropology. This interdisciplinary approach spans a wide range of interests: phonology, phonetics, morphology, syntax, vocabulary, semantics, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, or any other recognised facet of language study.
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