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A production limitation in syllable number: a longitudinal study of one child's early vocabulary
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1997
Year
Speech StreamNeurolinguisticsLanguage DevelopmentEarly Childhood LanguagePsycholinguisticsPhonologyLanguage LearningDevelopmental SpeechSyllable NumberSecond Language AcquisitionProductive VocabularyChild LanguagePhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesProduction LimitationHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceSpeech ProductionSpeech DevelopmentPhonology MorphologyLanguage ScienceSpeech PerceptionMultisyllabic VocabularyLinguistics
The present paper reports on the phonological form of one child's productive vocabulary from age 0;10 to 1;8 with primary focus on his production of multisyllabic targets. A large percentage of his multisyllabic vocabulary was produced as one syllable until the age of 1;6. This limitation was not due to a tendency to extract only single syllables from the speech stream, but rather due primarily to a limitation on production. While some portion of his one-syllable productions could be interpreted as the result of single syllable extraction, a sizeable portion affirmed that he extracted the target size correctly by his inclusion of first and final target phonemes in his productions (e.g. [po] for piano and [kiz] for candies). The resolution of this limitation coincides with his move toward two-word speech. We conclude that there is a developmental and perhaps maturational limitation in the capacity to carry out the processes underlying word and sentence production.