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Definite Change Taking Place: Determiner Realization in Multiethnic Communities in New Zealand
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In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2020)
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An Acoustic Analysis of New Zealand English Vowels in Auckland
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Tongue Retraction in Arabic: An Ultrasound Study
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In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2016 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2017)
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Comparison of vocal tract shape modelling methods: MRI vs AR
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Assessing and improving the intelligibility of synthetic speech for healthcare robot
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Liu, Wei. - : ResearchSpace@Auckland, 2013
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Perception of synthetic speech with emotion modelling delivered through a robot platform: an initial investigation with older listeners
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Perception of synthetic speech with emotion modelling delivered through a robot platform: an initial investigation with older listeners
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Perception of synthetic speech with emotion modelling delivered through a robot platform: an initial investigation with older listeners
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Changes in the pronunciation of Māori and implications for teachers and learners of Māori
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/u/ fronting and /t/ aspiration in Māori and New Zealand English
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Age-related changes in fundamental frequency and formants : a longitudinal study of four speakers
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Blocking of word-boundary consonant lengthening in Sienese Italian
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Developmental trends in infant preferences for affective intent in mothers' speech
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Abstract:
According to Kitamura & Burnham (2003), affective intent is modified in infant-directed (ID) speech such that mothers accentuate different emotional messages at different ages – ‘comforting’ at 3 months, ‘approving’ at 6 months, and ‘directive’ at 9 months. This study examined preferences for the three ID emotion types by infants aged 3, 6 and 9 months. After adults had rated utterances according to affective category, infants were tested with the 12 best exemplars using an auditory preference procedure. Results revealed that 3-month-olds preferred ‘comforting’ utterances; 6-month-olds preferred ‘approving’ to ‘directive’ ID utterances, and listened equally to ‘approving’ and ‘comforting’ utterances; and 9-month-olds showed no preference for any ID emotion type. Because it was possible that 9-month-olds were attending to segmental information, they were tested using low-pass filtered stimuli, and were found to prefer ‘directive’ to ‘comforting’ ID utterances, and listen equally to ‘directive’ and ‘approving’ utterances. It is concluded that during the first year, mothers’ speech not only relies on contingent responsiveness but is also affected by their infant’s age and state of development.
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Keyword:
language and emotions; mother and child; speech perception in infants; XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: http://handle.westernsydney.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:52650 https://assta.org/proceedings/sst/2006/sst2006-59.pdf
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20 |
Deepening or lessening the divide between diphthongs : an analysis of the Queen's annual Christmas broadcasts
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