Author:
KIMBROUGH OLLER D.,EILERS REBECCA E.,URBANO RICHARD,COBO-LEWIS ALAN B.
Abstract
The study of bilingualism has often focused on two contradictory
possibilities: that the learning of two languages may produce deficits
of
performance in each language by comparison with performance of
monolingual individuals, or on the contrary, that the learning of two
languages may produce linguistic or cognitive advantages with regard to
the monolingual learning experience. The work reported here addressed
the possibility that the very early bilingual experience of infancy may
affect the unfolding of vocal precursors to speech. The results of
longitudinal research with 73 infants aged 0;4 to 1;6 in monolingual and
bilingual environments provided no support for either a bilingual deficit
hypothesis nor for its opposite, a bilingual advantage hypothesis. Infants
reared in bilingual and monolingual environments manifested similar
ages of onset for canonical babbling (production of well-formed
syllables), an event known to be fundamentally related to speech
development. Further, quantitative measures of vocal performance
(proportion of usage of well-formed syllables and vowel-like sounds)
showed additional similarities between monolingual and bilingual
infants. The similarities applied to infants of middle and low socio-economic
status and to infants that were born at term or prematurely.
The results suggest that vocal development in the first year of life is
robust with respect to conditions of rearing. The biological foundations
of speech appear to be such as to resist modifications in the natural
schedule of vocal development.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
63 articles.
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