The representation of voice and contrasts in children's early phonological systems

被引:0
|
作者
Ingram, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Dept Speech & Hearing Sci, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1515/flin.2004.38.1-2.145
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
Studies on the acquisition of voice contrasts by children have focused on when they appear and their acoustic properties. The present study examines the issue of how children's early voice contrasts should be represented. It explores this issue with three classes of consonants: voiced stops, voiceless stops, and nasals. Data are first presented from phonological analyses of selected children that show these three classes need to be represented by different features dependent on syllable position. The tendency is for children to merge the voiced and voiceless stops in syllable initial position, leading to a distinction in the feature [sonorant] to distinguish them from nasals. In syllable final position, however, some children associate final voiced stops with final nasals, in contrast to final voiceless stops, requiring a feature distinction of [voice] rather than [sonorant]. If children's phonologies are developed under the influence of language universals, it is proposed that a possibility should also exist in adult phonological systems. Data are presented from Japanese, Quichua, Warao and Mixtec, based on studies by Piggott (1992) and Rice (1993), to demonstrate that such may be the case. For example, syllable initial nasals in Japanese must be represented as [sonorant] so that they do not block Rendaku. Meanwhile, syllable final nasals must be represented as [voiced] in order to participate in regressive voicing assimilation. Also, some data exist indicating that nasal harmony from syllable initial position is blocked by obstruents, while nasal harmony from the end words may be blocked by voiceless segments. The article concludes with a suggested typology of four kinds of languages based on whether nasals as represented as [sonorant], [voiced] or some combination of both.
引用
收藏
页码:145 / 155
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The voice of the victim: Gender, representation and early Christian martyrdom
    Cooper, K
    [J]. BULLETON OF THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY, 1998, 80 (03): : 147 - 157
  • [32] Voice Feature Analysis for Early Detection of Voice Disability in Children
    Taib, Dina
    Tarique, Mohammed
    Islam, Rumana
    [J]. 2018 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON SIGNAL PROCESSING AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (ISSPIT), 2018, : 12 - 17
  • [33] Quantifying phonological representation abilities in Spanish-speaking preschool children
    Anthony, Jason L.
    Aghara, Rachel G.
    Solari, Emily J.
    Dunkelberger, Martha J.
    Williams, Jeffrey M.
    Liang, Lan
    [J]. APPLIED PSYCHOLINGUISTICS, 2011, 32 (01) : 19 - 49
  • [34] Early reading achievement in children with expressive phonological disorders
    Larrivee, LS
    Catts, HW
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY, 1999, 8 (02) : 118 - 128
  • [35] Societal influences on the child health policy. Agents of the child - children's voice representation
    Zdunek, K.
    Rigby, M.
    Blair, M.
    Schroder-Back, P.
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2017, 27 : 500 - 500
  • [36] Gender Representation in Children's Books: Case of an Early Childhood Setting
    Filipovic, Katarina
    [J]. JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN CHILDHOOD EDUCATION, 2018, 32 (03) : 310 - 325
  • [37] Children's preferences in early phonological acquisition: How does it reflect sensitivity to the ambient language?
    Kopkalli-Yavuz, H
    Topbas, S
    [J]. STUDIES ON TURKISH AND TURKIC LANGUAGES, PROCEEDINGS, 2000, 46 : 291 - 298
  • [38] Clues of children's phonological knowledge restructuring in repair data found in their early writing development
    Moresco Miranda, Ana Ruth
    Nobre da Cunha, Ana Paula
    [J]. LETRAS DE HOJE-ESTUDOS E DEBATES EM LINGUISTICA LITERATURA E LINGUA PORTUGUESA, 2013, 48 (03): : 343 - 354
  • [39] Children's Sensitivity to Phonological Context in Spelling
    Bourassa, Derrick C.
    Bargen, Meghan
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE EXPERIMENTALE, 2013, 67 (04): : 300 - 301
  • [40] PHONOLOGICAL PROCESSES IN THE ACQUISITION OF CHILDREN'S LANGUAGE
    Othero, Gabriel de Avila
    [J]. REVISTA VIRTUAL DE ESTUDOS DA LINGUAGEM-REVEL, 2005, 3 (05):