Abstract

Infants exploit acoustic boundaries to perceptually organize phrases in speech. This prosodic parsing ability is well-attested and is a cornerstone to the development of speech perception and grammar. However, infants also receive linguistic input in child songs. This study provides evidence that infants parse songs into meaningful phrasal units and replicates previous research for speech. Six-month-old Dutch infants (n=80) were tested in the song or speech modality in the head-turn preference procedure. First, infants were familiarized to two versions of the same word sequence: One version represented a well-formed unit, and the other contained a phrase boundary halfway through. At test, infants were presented two passages, each containing one version of the familiarized sequence. The results for speech replicated the previously observed preference for the passage containing the well-formed sequence, but only in a more fine-grained analysis. The preference for well-formed phrases was also observed in the song modality, indicating that infants recognize phrase structure in song. There were acoustic differences between stimuli of the current and previous studies, suggesting that infants are flexible in their processing of boundary cues while also providing a possible explanation for differences in effect sizes.

Highlights

  • Across the globe, caregivers sing for their infants (Trehub & Trainor, 1998)

  • Previous research provides evidence that infants are sensitive to small phonological units like syllables and words in song lyrics: For example, already before their first birthday infants recognize changes in the syllable order in songs (François et al, 2017; Lebedeva & Kuhl, 2010; Suppanen, Huotilainen, & Ylinen, 2019; Thiessen & Saffran, 2009), differentiate between rhyming and non-rhyming songs (Hahn, Benders, Snijders, & Fikkert, 2018), and learn novel words recurring in the song lyrics (Snijders, Benders, & Fikkert, 2020)

  • The current study asks whether infants exploit the melodic phrase structure of ID songs to perceptually organize the linguistic input in songs

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Summary

Introduction

Caregivers sing for their infants (Trehub & Trainor, 1998). Songs often contain language in the song lyrics and thereby entail the possibility of language learning for the infant listener. Speakers signal prosodic boundaries by altering prosodic cues like pitch, duration, and pauses at constituent edges (Wagner & Watson, 2010). Recognizing these prosodic cues in their input aids infants in determining the edges of syntactic constituents (e.g., de Carvalho, Dautriche, & Christophe, 2017; Hawthorne & Gerken, 2014) and stimulates their morpho-syntactic development (Morgan & Demuth, 1996). The current study asks whether infants exploit the melodic phrase structure of ID songs to perceptually organize the linguistic input in songs

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