4.5 Article

Quantifying Sources of Variability in Infancy Research Using the Infant-Directed-Speech Preference

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/2515245919900809

Keywords

language acquisition; speech perception; infant-directed speech; reproducibility; experimental methods; open data; open materials; preregistered

Funding

  1. Laura and John Arnold Foundation through the Association for Psychological Science
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [12R81103, 2018-05823, 402470-2011]
  3. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada [12R20580]
  4. United Kingdom's Economic and Social Research Council [ES/L008955/1, ES/N005635/1]
  5. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-17-EURE-0017]
  6. European Research Council Synergy Grant (SOMICS) [609819]
  7. Alvin V., Jr. and Nancy C. Baird Professorship
  8. Korean National Research Fund [NRF-2016S1A2A2912606]
  9. U.S. National Institutes of Health [R03 HD079779, R37 HD037466]
  10. Leibniz ScienceCampus Primate Cognition seed funds
  11. Science Academy, Turkey, Young Scientist Award Program (BAGEP)
  12. Research Manitoba, University of Manitoba
  13. Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba

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Psychological scientists have become increasingly concerned with issues related to methodology and replicability, and infancy researchers in particular face specific challenges related to replicability: For example, high-powered studies are difficult to conduct, testing conditions vary across labs, and different labs have access to different infant populations. Addressing these concerns, we report on a large-scale, multisite study aimed at (a) assessing the overall replicability of a single theoretically important phenomenon and (b) examining methodological, cultural, and developmental moderators. We focus on infants' preference for infant-directed speech (IDS) over adult-directed speech (ADS). Stimuli of mothers speaking to their infants and to an adult in North American English were created using seminaturalistic laboratory-based audio recordings. Infants' relative preference for IDS and ADS was assessed across 67 laboratories in North America, Europe, Australia, and Asia using the three common methods for measuring infants' discrimination (head-turn preference, central fixation, and eye tracking). The overall meta-analytic effect size (Cohen's d) was 0.35, 95% confidence interval = [0.29, 0.42], which was reliably above zero but smaller than the meta-analytic mean computed from previous literature (0.67). The IDS preference was significantly stronger in older children, in those children for whom the stimuli matched their native language and dialect, and in data from labs using the head-turn preference procedure. Together, these findings replicate the IDS preference but suggest that its magnitude is modulated by development, native-language experience, and testing procedure.

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