Abstract

Previous research has demonstrated that falling contours predominate in infant utterances as early as 3 months of age. The precocious appearance of falling intonation is usually attributed to “biological tendencies,” that is, the physiological naturalness of descending fundamental frequency patterns. In contrast, other investigations have shown that some children do not use adultlike falling or rising intonation contours until they produce their first words. To resolve these conflicting views of prosodic development, this study acoustically investigated intonation production in the monosyllabic utterances of 10 English-speaking children from 10 to 13 months of age and the utterance-final monosyllables of ten 4-year-olds. Children in both age groups produced a wider accent range in falling contours than in rising contours. Infants produced a narrower accent range than the preschoolers. The findings suggest that biological tendencies are not sufficient to account for children’s acquisition of intonation between the ages of 1 and 4 years.

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