Phonological Deveopment Flashcards
Consonants by age 2
(Crowe & McLeod, 2020)
p, b, m, w (bilabials); d, n, h (glottal)
Consonants by age 3
(Crowe & McLeod, 2020)
Bilabials, glottals, +f, n, d +t, +y +k, +g, +ŋ (velars), glottal
consonants by age 4
(Crowe & McLeod, 2020)
Bilabials, f +v (labiodentals), n,d, t, +s, +z, +l (alveolar) y, +ʃ, +tʃ, +dʒ, velars, glottal
consonants by age 5
(Crowe & McLeod, 2020)
Bilabials, Labiodentals, + ð, alveolars, +ʒ, +r (palatal), velar, glottal
consonants by age 6
(Crowe & McLeod, 2020)
Bilabials, labiodentals, +θ (interdentals), alveolars, palatal, velar, glottal
Define: Coarticulation
The articulation of one sound is influenced by a preceding or following sound
example, while the sound /n/ of English normally has an alveolar place of articulation, in the word tenth it is pronounced with a dental place of articulation because the following sound, /θ/, is dental
Clinical relevance of Coarticulation
relevance: sound might be more easily learned/produced correctly in one context than in
others
Infant perception, high amplitude sucking
Used to obtain data on the discriminatory skills of infants from birth to 3-4 months of age
Infants can control the presentation of the speech stimulus by the rates of sucking on a pacifier attached to a pressure transducer
Increase in sucking is interpreted as an expression of awareness of the sound stimulus
Infant perception, Visually reinforced head turn
Used with infants between 6 - 12 mo
background stimulus is presented followed by a minimally different stimulus and then the original background stimulus is repeated
Head turned toward the new stimulus is reinforced with the presentation of a lighted animated toy indicating that the infant is able to discriminate the two contrasting sounds
Infant Production
anatomical structures affect infant vocal productions
children need to gain control of the laryngeal and articulatory structure to have the necessary precision to produce sounds
also requires maturation of the perceptual mechanisms
Infant v Adult vocal tract
Relatively shorter pharyngeal cavity
Tongue positioned relatively farther forward in the oral cavity
A gradual instead of a right-angle bend in the oropharyngeal channel
High larynx
Early stages of production (Oller, 1976, 1980)
Birth
Reflexive cry
Sounds while crying are nasalized (oral and nasal cavity and coupled)
Early stages of production (Oller, 1976, 1980)
0 - 1 month
Phonation stage
Speech-like sounds are rare
2-3 months
Early stages of production (Oller, 1976, 1980)
Goo or cooing stage
Velar (g, k, -ng) consonant-like sound are produced with some frequency
4 - 6 months
Early stages of production (Oller, 1976, 1980)
Expansion stage
Child gains control of laryngeal and oral articulatory mechanisms
Playful use of squealing, growling, yelling, raspberry vocalizations
Adult-like vowels begin to be produced