Publication | Closed Access
Development and phonetic differentiation of speech movement patterns.
111
Citations
5
References
1999
Year
Speech KinematicsLanguage DevelopmentGeneralized TemplateSpeech SciencePhonologyDevelopmental SpeechSpeech RecognitionPhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionSpeech Motor ControlLanguage StudiesHealth SciencesMature TemplatesSpeech ProductionSpeech Movement PatternsSpeech CommunicationSpeech AcousticsMotor SpeechSpeech ProcessingYoung ChildrenSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
It is often hypothesized that speech production units are less distinctive in young children and that generalized movement primitives, or templates, serve as a base on which distinctive, mature templates are later elaborated. This hypothesis was examined by analyzing the shape and stability of single close-open speech movements of the lower lip recorded in 4-year-old, 7-year-old, and adult speakers during production of utterances that varied in only a single phoneme. To assess the presence of a generalized template, lower lip movement sequences were time and amplitude normalized, and a pattern recognition procedure was implemented. The findings indicate that speech movements of children already converged on phonetically distinctive patterns by 4 years of age. In contrast, an index of spatiotemporal stability demonstrated that the stability of underlying patterning of the movement sequence improves with maturation.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1