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Whining as mother-directed speech
14
Citations
11
References
2005
Year
Language DevelopmentRhetoricSpeech ScienceCommunicationVocal PatternDevelopmental SpeechSpeech ActApplied LinguisticsChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionConversation AnalysisDiscourse AnalysisNeutral SpeechLanguage StudiesAcoustic AnalysisHealth SciencesMother-directed SpeechSpeech ProductionSpeech AcousticSpeech CommunicationVoiceSpeech AcousticsParalinguisticsSpeech PerceptionPitch ContoursLinguisticsNonverbal Communication
Although little studied, whining is a vocal pattern that is both familiar and irritating to parents of preschool- and early school-age children. The current study employed multidimensional scaling to identify the crucial acoustic characteristics of whining speech by analysing participants' perceptions of its similarity to other types of speech (question, neutral speech, angry statement, demand, and boasting). We discovered not only that participants find whining speech more annoying than other forms of speech, but that it shares the salient acoustic characteristics found in motherese, namely increased pitch, slowed production, and exaggerated pitch contours. We think that this relationship is not random but may reflect the fact that the two forms of vocalization are the result of a similar accommodation to a universal human auditory sensitivity to the prosody of both forms of speech. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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