4.5 Article

Infants' early ability to segment the conversational speech signal predicts later language development: A retrospective analysis

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 643-655

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.42.4.643

Keywords

speech segmentation; language development; outcomes; infant; individual differences

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Two studies examined relationships between infants' early speech processing performance and later language and cognitive outcomes. Study 1 found that performance on speech segmentation tasks before 12 months of age related to expressive vocabulary at 24 months. However, performance on other tasks was not related to 2-year vocabulary. Study 2 assessed linguistic and cognitive skills at 4-6 years of age for children who had participated in segmentation studies as infants. Children who had been able to segment words from fluent speech scored higher on language measures, but not general IQ, as preschoolers. Results suggest that speech segmentation ability is an important prerequisite for successful language development, and they offer potential for developing measures to detect language impairment at an earlier age.

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