Abstract

Infant-directed speech (IDS) provides an environment that appears to play a significant role in the origins of language in the human infant. Differences have been reported in the use of IDS across cultures, suggesting different styles of infant language-learning. Importantly, both cross-cultural and intra-cultural research suggest there may be a positive relationship between the use of IDS and rates of language development, underscoring the need to investigate cultural differences more deeply. The majority of studies, however, have conceptualized IDS monolithically, granting little attention to a potentially key distinction in how IDS manifests across cultures during the first two years. This study examines and quantifies for the first time differences within IDS in the use of baby register (IDS/BR), an acoustically identifiable type of IDS that includes features such as high pitch, long duration, and smooth intonation (the register that is usually assumed to occur in IDS), and adult register (IDS/AR), the type of IDS that does not include such features and thus sounds as if it could have been addressed to an adult. We studied IDS across 19 American and 19 Lebanese mother-infant dyads, with particular focus on the differential use of registers within IDS as mothers interacted with their infants ages 0–24 months. Our results showed considerable usage of IDS/AR (>30% of utterances) and a tendency for Lebanese mothers to use more IDS than American mothers. Implications for future research on IDS and its role in elucidating how language evolves across cultures are explored.

Highlights

  • BackgroundLanguage is both a biological and a social phenomenon [1] and a hallmark of what makes us human

  • The alternative analysis in terms of Infant-directed speech (IDS) Seconds per Minute showed that mothers used IDS/AR quite frequently: for Lebanese mothers, an average of 31% of the time in recordings being occupied by IDS was IDS/AR, and for American mothers, 26% of the time occupied by IDS was IDS/AR

  • The tabulated results for Rate in Utterances per Minute indicate that Lebanese mothers, compared to American mothers, produced more IDS, a fact reflected in Fig 1 as well

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Summary

Introduction

Language is both a biological and a social phenomenon [1] and a (perhaps the) hallmark of what makes us human. While the language capacity itself may be inherited, languages—including how meanings emerge as well as how they are shared and understood—are passed on through cultures. Persistent question in the quest for language origins is how infants across cultures of the world develop such diverse languages. Modern biology makes clear that the PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0151518. Communication Disorders and by the Plough Foundation, which supports DKO’s Chair of Excellence at the University of Memphis The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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