Abstract

Models of phonological development assume that speech perception precedes speech production and that children acquire suprasegmental features earlier than segmental features. Studies of Chinese-speaking children challenge these assumptions. For example, Chinese-speaking children can produce tones before two-and-a-half years but are not able to discriminate the same tones until after 6 years of age. This study compared the perception and production of monosyllabic Cantonese tones directly in 3 -year-old children. Twenty children and their mothers identified Cantonese tones in a picture identification test and produced monosyllabic tones in a picture labeling task. To control for lexical biases on tone ratings, the mother- and child-productions were low-pass filtered to eliminate lexical information and were presented to five judges for tone classification. Detailed acoustic analysis was performed. Contrary to the view that children master lexical tones earlier than segmental phonemes, results showed that 3-year-old children could not perceive or produce any Cantonese tone with adult-like proficiency and incorrect tone productions were acoustically different from criterion. In contrast to previous findings that Cantonese-speaking children mastered tone production before tone perception, we observed more accuracy during speech perception than production. Findings from Cantonese-speaking children challenge some of the established tenets in theories of phonological development that have been tested mostly with native English speakers.

Highlights

  • Lexical tone is the use of pitch variations to contrast lexical meaning (Yip, 2002)

  • The order of acquisition of Mandarin tones varies across studies most report that the rising tone is more difficult and the latest to be acquired by children (Li and Thompson, 1977; Clumeck, 1980)

  • This study examined monosyllabic Cantonese tone perception and production in the same group of 3-year-old Cantonesespeaking children and provided detailed comparisons on the acoustic characteristics of adults’ tones and children’s correct and incorrect productions to test the tenet in theories of phonological development that (a) children rapidly acquire suprasegmental features in their language and fully master lexical tones before 3 years of age, well before their full mastery of the segmental features (Li and Thompson, 1977; Snow, 1997, 2006; Hua and Dodd, 2006), and that (b) speech perception precedes speech production (Edwards, 1974; Greenlee, 1980)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Lexical tone is the use of pitch variations to contrast lexical meaning (Yip, 2002). Models of phonological development assume that acquisition of lexical tone and other suprasegmental features (prosody) is early, rapid, and complete before the mastery of segmental features (vowels and consonants). This study examined monosyllabic Cantonese tone perception and production in the same group of 3-year-old Cantonesespeaking children and provided detailed comparisons on the acoustic characteristics of adults’ tones and children’s correct and incorrect productions to test the tenet in theories of phonological development that (a) children rapidly acquire suprasegmental features in their language and fully master lexical tones before 3 years of age, well before their full mastery of the segmental features (Li and Thompson, 1977; Snow, 1997, 2006; Hua and Dodd, 2006), and that (b) speech perception precedes speech production (Edwards, 1974; Greenlee, 1980). Specific research questions were (1) How well do 3-year-old children perceive the Cantonese tones? (2) How well do 3-year-old children produce the Cantonese tones? (3) What are the relationships between children’s tone perception and production ability? and (4) What are the acoustic characteristics of children’s correct and incorrect Cantonese tone productions?

Participants
Procedures for Child and Adult Speakers
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
ETHICS STATEMENT
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