TY - GEN
T1 - Infant-directed speech enhances temporal rhythmic structure in the envelope
AU - Leong, Victoria
AU - Kalashnikova, Marina
AU - Burnham, Denis
AU - Goswami, Usha
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - ![CDATA[Infant-directed speech (IDS) supports language learning via mechanisms that are still not well-understood. Here, we adopt a ‘temporal sampling’ perspective to investigate whether rhythmic enhancements in the temporal structure of IDS could support multi-timescale neuronal oscillatory sampling of the speech signal by the infant brain. We compare natural maternal speech directed to infants at the ages of 7-, 9-, 11- and 19-months, to adult-directed speech (ADS). Speech temporal structure is analysed using a novel multi-timescale Spectral-Amplitude Modulation Phase Hierarchy (S-AMPH) model, which extracts the Stress-rate, Syllable-rate and Phoneme-rate modulations (i.e. temporal patterns). Compared to ADS, we find that IDS shows a ‘stress-shifted’ temporal profile. Stress-rate modulations dominate the modulation spectrum of IDS, whereas Syllable-rate modulations are dominant in ADS. Further, multi-timescale phase-synchronisation measures indicate that in IDS, Syllable-rate modulations are more synchronised to Stress-rate modulations and less synchronised to Phoneme-rate modulations. Thus, when speaking to infants, mothers pattern their syllables more regularly with prosodic stress, while allowing the phonemes within uttered syllables to vary more in timing. Accordingly, we conclude that the temporal structure of (Australian English) IDS is primarily stress-dominant, which could ‘tune’ the infant brain toward stress-based speech segmentation — an adaptive strategy for boot-strapping early language learning.]]
AB - ![CDATA[Infant-directed speech (IDS) supports language learning via mechanisms that are still not well-understood. Here, we adopt a ‘temporal sampling’ perspective to investigate whether rhythmic enhancements in the temporal structure of IDS could support multi-timescale neuronal oscillatory sampling of the speech signal by the infant brain. We compare natural maternal speech directed to infants at the ages of 7-, 9-, 11- and 19-months, to adult-directed speech (ADS). Speech temporal structure is analysed using a novel multi-timescale Spectral-Amplitude Modulation Phase Hierarchy (S-AMPH) model, which extracts the Stress-rate, Syllable-rate and Phoneme-rate modulations (i.e. temporal patterns). Compared to ADS, we find that IDS shows a ‘stress-shifted’ temporal profile. Stress-rate modulations dominate the modulation spectrum of IDS, whereas Syllable-rate modulations are dominant in ADS. Further, multi-timescale phase-synchronisation measures indicate that in IDS, Syllable-rate modulations are more synchronised to Stress-rate modulations and less synchronised to Phoneme-rate modulations. Thus, when speaking to infants, mothers pattern their syllables more regularly with prosodic stress, while allowing the phonemes within uttered syllables to vary more in timing. Accordingly, we conclude that the temporal structure of (Australian English) IDS is primarily stress-dominant, which could ‘tune’ the infant brain toward stress-based speech segmentation — an adaptive strategy for boot-strapping early language learning.]]
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/552250
UR - http://www.interspeech2014.org/public.php?page=home.html
M3 - Conference Paper
SP - 2563
EP - 2567
BT - Proceedings of Interspeech 2014, 15th Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association, Singapore, September 14-18, 2014
PB - International Speech Communication Association
T2 - International Speech Communication Association. Conference
Y2 - 14 September 2014
ER -