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An investigation into how the acoustics of open plan and enclosed classrooms affect speech perception for kindergarten children ...
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An investigation into how the acoustics of open plan and enclosed classrooms affect speech perception for kindergarten children ...
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An investigation into how the acoustics of open plan and enclosed classrooms affect speech perception for kindergarten children
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The Development of the Mealings, Demuth, Dillon, and Buchholz Classroom Speech Perception Test
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The Effect of different open plan and enclosed classroom acoustic conditions on speech perception in Kindergarten children
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An Assessment of different sized open plan and enclosed kindergarten classroom listening environments
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Investigating the acoustics of a sample of open plan and enclosed Kindergarten classrooms in Australia
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The Role of utterance length and position in 3-year-olds' production of third person singular -s
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Abstract:
Purpose: Evidence from children's spontaneous speech suggests that utterance length and utterance position may help explain why children omit grammatical morphemes in some contexts but not others. This study investigated whether increased utterance length (hence, increased grammatical complexity) adversely affects children's third person singular -s production in more controlled experimental conditions. Method: An elicited imitation task with 12 Australian English-speaking children ages 2;9 (years;months) to 3;2 (Mage = 2;11) was conducted comparing third person singular -s production in 3-word and 5-word utterances, both utterance medially (e.g., He sits back; He sits back and swings) and utterance finally (e.g., There he sits; That's the way he sits) using a within-subjects design. Children were shown pictorial representations of each utterance on a computer and were invited to repeat 16 pseudorandomized prerecorded utterances. Acoustic analysis determined the presence/absence and duration of the third person singular morpheme. Results: Third person singular production was significantly lower utterance medially compared to utterance finally for the 5-word utterances and significantly lower utterance medially in the 5-word compared to 3-word utterances. Conclusion: These results suggest that increased utterance length results in significantly lower third person singular production, but only in the more articulatorily challenging utterance-medial position. Thus, morpheme omission is greatest at the intersection of grammatical and phonological complexity. ; 11 page(s)
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Keyword:
Acoustic phonetics; Child language acquisition; Grammatical morphemes; Speech production
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/326499
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An Investigation into the acoustics of an open plan compared to enclosed Kindergarten classroom
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Investigating the effect of intrusive noise levels on speech perception in an open-plan kindergarten classroom
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Cluster reduction and compensatory lengthening in the acquisition of possessive -s
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Acoustic investigations into the later acquisition of syllabic -es plurals
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Two-year-olds' acquisition of the possessive morpheme : an acoustic analysis
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