Title: Phonological Development
1Phonological Development
2Discussion Outline
- Normal Developmental Stages
- Developmental Norms
- segmental norms vs phonological processes
- Theories of Phonological Acquisition
- Cognitive Model of Phonological Acquisition
- Components of Early Phonological Development
- Differences in Assessing Early vs Later
Phonological Abilities
3Discussion Outline (continued)
- Types of Analyses
- Independent Relational
- Profile of Typical 2 year old
- Who are Late Talkers?
- Profiles of Late Talkers
- Rescorla Ratner
- Williams Elbert
- Develop a Protocol for Late Talkers
44 Stages of Development
- 1. Prelinguistic (0 - 1 year)
- reflexive vocalizations
- cooing
- vocal play
- babbling
- variegated babbling
52. First Words (1 - 1.6)
- Whole-word strategy
- Unanalyzed wholes
- Progressive idioms
63. Phonemic Development (1.6 - 4)
- Rule-governed strategy
- 50 word vocabulary
74. Stabilization
- Acquisition of later sounds
8Developmental Norms
- Segmental acquisition studies
- Phonological process norms
9Theories of Phonological Acquisition
- Universalist-Linguistic
- Unfolding of abilities (linear progression)
- passive learner
- universal order of acq (all children develop in
same way)
- Cognitive
- non-linear development
- acti ve learner
- individual differences
10Theories of Phonological Acquisition
- Universalist-Linguistic
- learning to pronounce is lower level skill-gt
developmental sequence - related to/constrained by anatomical/physio
characteristics of human auditory/artic tracts - phonemes and individual sounds are the units of
acquisition
- Cognitive
- acquisition of phono is cognitive process in the
way child - a. forms categories
- b. recognizes patterns
- c. forms rules
- processes of acquis
- selectivity
- creativity
- hypothesis formation
11Summary of Cognitive Model of Phonological
Acquisition
- Process of Acquisition
- whole-word acquisition (unanalyzed)
- recognizes similarities b/w classes of sounds and
constructs rules for relating similar sounds and
formulate rules - develops a rule and applies it to other related
items
- Evidence
- progressive idioms
- experimentation
- hypothesis formation
12Summary of Cognitive Model of Phonological
Acquisition
- Process of Acquisition
- Childs categories not necessarily same as
adults - Recognizes new and relevant information
- Creates new rules
- Evidence
- Overgeneralization/ Regression
- Changes Hypotheses
- Hypothesis Formation
133 Components of Early Phonological Development
(Stoel-Gammon, 1991)
- General Patterns of Development
- at 24 mo, generally have expressive vocab of
300 words - 50 of what they say is understood by strangers
- by 3 yrs, 75 intelligibile with vocal of 1000
wds and MLU of 3.1
143 Components (continued)
- Individual Differences
- Lot of variation among 2 year olds, but certain
commonalities - final inventory never greater than initial
inventory - tendency for stops, nasals, glides before frics,
liquids, affrics - front consonants appear before back consonants
153 Components (continued)
- Atypical Development / RED FLAGS
- numerous vowel errors
- frequent initial consonant deletion
- substitution of glottal stop of h for various
consonants - deletion of final consonants at 3 years
16Differences in Assessing Early vs Later
Linguistic Behaviors (Stoel-Gammon, 1991)
- Given the tremendous individual variation in
early development (babbling -gtfirst words-gtword
combinations), MUST use broad evaluations rather
than focus on indidividual phonemes - Normal development at this age cant be
determined by comparing childs performance with
set of norms like those used for older children
17Stoel-Gammon (1991) Continued
- Must include size and nature of phonetic
inventory, correct productions, error types, and
overall intelligibility (INDEPENDENT RELATIONAL
ANALYSES) - ALSO
- age of onset of meaningful speech
- lexicon size
18Two Types of Analyses Used in Assessing Younger
Children
- Independent Analysis
- focuses on the sound types and syllable
structures produced by the child independent of
the adult target - phonetic inventory (by WI/WF positions)
- syllable structure
- Relational Analysis
- compares childs pronunciation of word with adult
form and identifies what is correct/ incorrect in
relation to adult target - PCC
- error patterns (phonological processes)
19Profile of Typical 2 Year Old (Stoel-Gammon, 1987)
- Syllable Structure
- Simple structure
- CV, CVC, CVCV, CVCVC
- Few or no clusters
- only WF
20Profile (continued)
- Phonetic Inventory
- Word-Initial Inventory
- 9-10 different sounds
- stops, nasals, frics, glides
- Word-Final Inventory
- 5-6 different sounds
- primarily stops with some nasals, frics, liquids
21Profile (continued)
- Accuracy
- about 70 accuracy
- this suggests that children kept their vocabulary
IN their phonology
22Who are Late Talkers?
- At 24 months, child has lt 50 word vocabulary
AND/OR - phonetic inventory with only 4-5 consonants and
limited variety of vowels
23Phonetic Profiles of Toddlers with SLI-E
(Rescorla Ratner, 1996)
- Variables that distinguished SLI-E children from
TD children at 24-31 months included - vocalization rate
- SLI-E vocalized less
- potentially perpetuate exp lang delay by losing
opportunities for vocal practice - size of consonant inventory
- SLI-E had restricted inventories (b,d, nasals,
glides, h) - syllable shape preferences
- SLI-E used V and CV shapes primarily
24Rescorla Ratner Conclusions
- Results suggest that non-grammatical (I.e.,
phonetic) factors contribute to the development
of expressive language deficits in toddlers - Suggest a bidirectional association between child
vocalization and maternal interaction - limited phonetic capacity interacts with
caregivers interactions in a way that further
reduces opportunities for exp lang learning and
practice
25A Prospective Longitudinal Study of Phonological
Development in Late Talkers (Williams Elbert,
2003)
- Independent Analyses
- Phonetic Inventory (WI/WF)
- Syllable Structure
- Preferences (frequency of occurrence) TOKEN
- Complexity (clusters)
- Diversity ( different syllable structures) TYPE
26Williams Elbert (continued)
- Relational Analyses
- PCC
- Sound Variability (stability of sound system)
- diff cons attempted/ diff cons produced
- no variability 1.0
- one-to-many correspondence (phoneme collapse) gt
1.0 - many-to-one correspondence (free variation) lt
1.0 - Error Patterns
- MLU and Lexicon Size
27Phonological Delay Vs Phonological Deviance
(Williams Elbert, 2001)
- Delay
- Larger inventories
- 13-15 WI 8-11 WF (at 32 months)
- Greater syll diversity
- 9.2 different syllables at 22-33 mo
- More complex syll
- 5.4 complex syllables at 22-33 months
- Deviance
- Limited inventories
- 6-9 WI 1-5 WF (at 32 months)
- Limited syll diversity
- 7.5 different syllables at 30-41 mo
- Simple syll structures
- 1.1 complex syllables at 30-41 months
28Phonological Delay Vs Phonological Deviance
(Williams Elbert, 2001)
- Delay
- Higher PCC (.56) at 31-33 months
- Lower variability (1.2) at 31-33 months
- Typical errors
- Fast rate of resolution
- Deviance
- Lower PCC (.34) at 40-41 months
- Greater variability (1.74) at 40-41 months
- Atypical errors
- Slow or no resolution
29Conclusions (Williams Elbert, 2003)
- Quantitative aspects of phonological and language
skills (inventory size, lexicon size, MLU) were
NOT diagnostic markers for identifying DELAYED vs
DEVIANT - Instead, qualitative differences (greater
variability and unusual sound errors) were
identified markers of long-term delay - However, the extent of the delay was greater for
the kids who did not catch up
30Develop a Protocol for Assessing Early Linguistic
Behaviors of Late Talkers
- How would you elicit the sample?
- How would you analyze the sample?
- Complete Analysis on Nicholas
- Go beyond analysis to synthesis/summary -gt what
is significant? - Diagnosis
- Normal Vs Delayed Vs Deviant?
- Compare results to Stoel-Gammon
- a. Profile of typical 2 year old
- b. Red flags
- Compare results to Williams Elberts Red Flags