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Journal ArticleDOI

Infant speech perception and cognitive skills as predictors of later vocabulary

TLDR
In this paper, the authors compared how early speech perception and cognitive skills predict later language outcomes using a within-participant design and found that only native vowel discrimination significantly predicted vocabulary, while evidence was ambiguous between null and alternative hypotheses for all infant predictors.
Abstract
Research has identified bivariate correlations between speech perception and cognitive measures gathered during infancy as well as correlations between these individual measures and later language outcomes. However, these correlations have not all been explored together in prospective longitudinal studies. The goal of the current research was to compare how early speech perception and cognitive skills predict later language outcomes using a within-participant design. To achieve this goal, we tested 97 5- to 7-month-olds on two speech perception tasks (stress pattern preference, native vowel discrimination) and two cognitive tasks (visual recognition memory, A-not-B) and later assessed their vocabulary outcomes at 18 and 24 months. Frequentist statistical analyses showed that only native vowel discrimination significantly predicted vocabulary. However, Bayesian analyses suggested that evidence was ambiguous between null and alternative hypotheses for all infant predictors. These results highlight the importance of recognizing and addressing challenges related to infant data collection, interpretation, and replication in the developmental field, a roadblock in our route to understanding the contribution of domain-specific and domain-general skills for language acquisition. Future methodological development and research along similar lines is encouraged to assess individual differences in infant speech perception and cognitive skills and their predictability for language development.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Learning to Read Interacts with Children’s Spoken Language Fluency

TL;DR: This article found that children articulate speech differently than adults until at least the end of adolescence, while this discrepancy is often attributed to the maturation of the speech motor system, they sought to demo...
Journal ArticleDOI

The paradigm shift in intercultural communication in digital space

TL;DR: In this paper, a functional approach made it possible to identify the strengths and weaknesses of digitization, the specifics of communication space in the spheres of science, technology and education and to predict possible changes in intercultural communication on the basis of the developing digital platform.
Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analytic approach to evaluating the explanatory adequacy of theories

- 07 Jun 2022 - 
TL;DR: The authors proposed Community-Augmented Meta-Analyses (CAMAs), which are built using all available data and can rely on sound statistical practices to model methodological effects, and like no other approach, are broad-scoped, cumulative and open.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proto-Lexicon Size and Phonotactic Knowledge are Linked in Non-Māori Speaking New Zealand Adults

- 01 Mar 2023 - 
TL;DR: Oh et al. as discussed by the authors found that exposure to a language you do not speak can lead to large-scale implicit knowledge about that language, which was supported by two tasks in which non-Māori-speaking New Zealanders distinguished real words from phonotactically matched non-words, suggesting lexical knowledge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical Properties of the Developing Brain are Associated with Language Input and Vocabulary Outcome

TL;DR: This article used magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) to examine how children's language environments underlie brain tissue mechanical properties, characterized as brain tissue stiffness and damping ratio, and promote vocabulary knowledge.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-language speech perception: Evidence for perceptual reorganization during the first year of life

TL;DR: This article showed that infants can discriminate non-native speech contrasts without relevant experience, and that there is a decline in this ability during ontogeny, which is a function of specific language experience.
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