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The Emergence of the Speech Capacity (Paperback)
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The Emergence of the Speech Capacity (Paperback)
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Recent studies of vocal development in infants have shed new light
on old questions of how the speech capacity is founded and how it
may have evolved in the human species. Vocalizations in the very
first months of life appear to provide previously unrecognized
clues to the earliest steps in the process by which language came
to exist and the processes by which communicative disorders arise.
Perhaps the most interesting sounds made by infants are the
uniquely human 'protophones' (loosely, 'babbling'), the precursors
to speech. Kimbrough Oller argues that these are most profitably
interpreted in the context of a new "infrastructural" model of
speech. The model details the manner in which well-formed speech
units are constructed, and it reveals how infant vocalizations
mature through the first months of life by increasingly adhering to
the rules of well-formed speech.
He lays out many advantages of an infrastructural approach.
Infrastructural interpretation illuminates the significance of
vocal stages, and highlights clinically significant deviations,
such as the previously unnoticed delays in vocal development that
occur in deaf infants. An infrastructural approach also specifies
potential paths of evolution for vocal communicative systems.
Infrastructural properties and principles of potential
communicative systems prove to be organized according to a natural
logic--some properties and principles naturally presuppose others.
Consequently some paths of evolution are likely while others can be
ruled out. An infrastructural analysis also provides a stable basis
for comparisons across species, comparisons that show how human
vocal capabilities outstrip those of their primate relatives even
during the first months of human infancy.
"The Emergence of the Speech Capacity" will challenge
psychologists, linguists, speech pathologists, and primatologists
alike to rethink the ways they categorize and describe
communication. Oller's infraphonological model permits provocative
reconceptualizations of the ways infant vocalizations progress
systematically toward speech, insightful comparisons between speech
and the vocal systems of other species, and fruitful speculations
about the origins of language.
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