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Children's development of self-regulation in speech production
Authors:MacDonald Ewen N  Johnson Elizabeth K  Forsythe Jaime  Plante Paul  Munhall Kevin G
Affiliation:1. Centre for Applied Hearing Research, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Ørsteds Plads, Building 352, DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark;2. Department of Psychology, Queen''s University, Kingston, Ontario K7L3N6, Canada;3. Department of Otolaryngology, Queen''s University, Kingston, Ontario K7L3N6, Canada;4. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto Mississauga, 3359 Mississauga Road North, Mississauga, Ontario L5L1C6, Canada
Abstract:Species-specific vocalizations fall into two broad categories: those that emerge during maturation, independent of experience, and those that depend on early life interactions with conspecifics. Human language and the communication systems of a small number of other species, including songbirds, fall into this latter class of vocal learning. Self-monitoring has been assumed to play an important role in the vocal learning of speech and studies demonstrate that perception of your own voice is crucial for both the development and lifelong maintenance of vocalizations in humans and songbirds. Experimental modifications of auditory feedback can also change vocalizations in both humans and songbirds. However, with the exception of large manipulations of timing, no study to date has ever directly examined the use of auditory feedback in speech production under the age of 4. Here we use a real-time formant perturbation task to compare the response of toddlers, children, and adults to altered feedback. Children and adults reacted to this manipulation by changing their vowels in a direction opposite to the perturbation. Surprisingly, toddlers' speech didn't change in response to altered feedback, suggesting that long-held assumptions regarding the role of self-perception in articulatory development need to be reconsidered.
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