Temporal markers of prosodic boundaries in children's speech production.
Citation
Dankovicova, J., Pigott, K., Wells, B. & Pepp, S. (2004) Temporal markers of prosodic boundaries in
children's speech production., Journal of the International Phonetic Association, vol. 34, pp. 17-36.
Abstract
It is often thought that the ability to use prosodic features accurately is mastered in early
childhood. However, research to date has produced conflicting evidence, notably about
the development of children's ability to mark prosodic boundaries. This paper investigates
(i) whether, by the age of eight, children use temporal boundary features in their speech in
a systematic way, and (ii) to what extent adult listeners are able to interpret their production
accurately and unambiguously. The material consists of minimal pairs of utterances: one
utterance includes a compound noun, in which there is no prosodic boundary after the
first noun, e.g. 'coffee-cake and tea', while the other utterance includes simple nouns,
separated by a prosodic boundary, e.g. 'coffee, cake and tea'. Ten eight-year-old children
took part, and their productions were rated by 23 adult listeners. Two phonetic exponents
of prosodic boundaries were analysed: pause duration and phrase-final lengthening. The
results suggest that, at the age of 8, there is considerable variability among children in
their ability to mark phrase boundaries of the kind analysed in the experiment, with some
children failing to differentiate between the members of the minimal pairs reliably. The
differences between the children in their use of boundary features were reflected in the
adults' perceptual judgements. Both temporal cues to prosodic boundaries significantly
affected the perceptual ratings, with pause being a more salient determinant of ratings than
phrase-final lengthening.