Speech Prosody 2020 2020
DOI: 10.21437/speechprosody.2020-166
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Looking for the edge: emerging segmentation abilities in atypical development

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Cited by 5 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In addition, the magnitude of the absolute difference in looking time between edge and unfamiliar was larger than between medial and unfamiliar. In line with previous word segmentation studies (Johnson et al, 2014 ; Butler and Frota, 2018 ; Frota et al, 2020 ), these findings suggest an advantage of the edge position over the medial position, which is consistent with the emergence of word segmentation at the utterance edge first, and was only found in the Audiovisual experiment. This set of findings, specific to the Audiovisual experiment, adds to previous suggestions that audiovisual information might provide support to infant speech segmentation (de la Cruz-Pavía et al, 2019 ; Tan and Burnham, 2019 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…In addition, the magnitude of the absolute difference in looking time between edge and unfamiliar was larger than between medial and unfamiliar. In line with previous word segmentation studies (Johnson et al, 2014 ; Butler and Frota, 2018 ; Frota et al, 2020 ), these findings suggest an advantage of the edge position over the medial position, which is consistent with the emergence of word segmentation at the utterance edge first, and was only found in the Audiovisual experiment. This set of findings, specific to the Audiovisual experiment, adds to previous suggestions that audiovisual information might provide support to infant speech segmentation (de la Cruz-Pavía et al, 2019 ; Tan and Burnham, 2019 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The results showed a trend whereby the infants that looked more to target words at utterance-edge position than to unfamiliar words [ r (32) = 0.33, p = 0.058] and that looked more at target words at utterance-medial position than to unfamiliar words [ r (32) = 0.33, p = 0.052] have larger later expressive vocabulary outcomes measured with the CDI percentile. This finding is in line with previous studies by indicating that emerging segmentation abilities are signaled by more looks to familiar target words at edge position and medial position than to unfamiliar words (Butler and Frota, 2018 ; Frota et al, 2020 ) and by showing a positive relation between better performance at the segmentation task and later vocabulary development.…”
Section: Early Word Segmentation and Later Vocabulary Outcomessupporting
confidence: 92%
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