Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T18:34:55.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The acquisition of the voicing contrast in English: a study of voice onset time in word-initial stop consonants*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2008

Marlys A. Macken
Affiliation:
Stanford University
David Barton
Affiliation:
Stanford University

Abstract

This paper reports on a longitudinal study of the acquisition of the voicing contrast in American English word-initial stop consonants, as measured by voice onset time. Four monolingual children were recorded at two-week intervals, beginning when the children were about 1; 6. Data provide evidence for three general stages: (1) the child has no contrast; (2) the child has a contrast but one that falls within the adult perceptual boundaries of one (usually voiced) phoneme and thus is presumably not perceptible to adults; and (3) the child has a contrast that resembles the adult contrast. The rate and nature of the developmental process are discussed in relation to two competing models for phonological acquisition and two hypotheses regarding the skills being learned.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

[*]

This research is part of the activities of the Stanford Child Phonology Project and has been supported by a National Science Foundation Grant (BNS 76–08968) to Charles A. Ferguson and Dorothy A. Huntington, Departments of Linguistics and Hearing and Speech Sciences, Stanford University. We gratefully acknowledge their support during all phases of the research. We would also like to thank Harold Clumeck, John Kingston and Deborah Ohsiek for their assistance at various stages of the data collection and Lise Menn, Carl Muller and Marsha Ziatin Laufer for comments on an earlier version of this paper. A summary of this study was given on 1 October 1977 at the Second Annual Boston University Conference on Child Language Development, and a preliminary version of this paper with a more detailed discussion of each subject's data appears in PRCLD 14 (1977). Address for correspondence: Dept. of Linguistics, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305.

References

REFERENCES

Baran, J. A., Zlatin Laufer, M. & Daniloff, R. (1977). Phonological contrastivity in conversation: a comparative study of voice onset time. JfPhon 5. 339–5.Google Scholar
Barton, D. (1976). The role of perception in the acquisition of phonology, Ph.D dissertation, University of London. (Indiana University Linguistics Club, 1978).Google Scholar
Barton, D. & Macken, M. (in press). An instrumental analysis of the English voicing contrast in four-year-olds. L & S 23.Google Scholar
Bond, Z. S. & Wilson, H. F. (1977). Voicing in the speech of language-delayed children. Paper presented at the 93rd ASA meeting (June).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, R. (1973). A first language: the early stages. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bush, C. N., Edwards, M. L., Luckau, J. M., Stoel, C. M., Macken, M. A., & Petersen, J. D. (1973). On specifying a system for transcribing consonants in child language: a working paper with examples from American English and Mexican Spanish. Stanford University: Department of Linguistics.Google Scholar
Carney, A. E., Widin, G. P. & Viemeister, N. F. (1977). Noncategorical perception of stop consonants differing in VOT. JAcS 62. 961–70.Google ScholarPubMed
Chen, M. & Wang, W. S-Y. (1975). Sound change: actuation and implementation. Lg 51. 255–81.Google Scholar
Dean, C. R. & Huntington, D. A. (1976). The acoustical bases of the voiced-voiceless distinction in esophageal speech. Paper presented at the ASHA annual meeting (November).Houston, Texas.Google Scholar
Dodd, B. (1974). The acquisition of phonological skills in normal, severely subnormal and deaf children. Ph.D. dissertation, University of London.Google Scholar
Ferguson, C. A. & Farwell, C. B. (1975). Words and sounds in early language acquisition. Lg 51. 419–39Google Scholar
Gilbert, J. H. V. (1977) A voice onset time analysis of apical stop production in three-year-olds. JChLang 4. 103–10.Google Scholar
Hirsh, I. J. (1959). Auditory perception of temporal order. JAcS 31. 759–67.Google Scholar
Hsieh, H.-I. (1972). Lexical diffusion: evidence from child language acquisition. Glossa. 6 89104.Google Scholar
Huntington, D. A., Clumeck, H., Macken, M. & Ohsiek, D. (1978). Some methodological considerations on the study of VOT in children. Stanford University: Hearing and Speech Sciences.Google Scholar
Jakobson, R. (1941) Child language, aphasia and phonological universals. The Hague-Mouton. (Translated by Keiler, A., 1968.)Google Scholar
Kewley-Port, D. & Preston, M. S. (1974). Early apical stop production: a voice onset time analysis. JPhon 2. 195210.Google Scholar
Klatt, D. H. (1975). Voice Onset time, frication and aspiration in word-initial consonant clusters. JSHR 18. 686706.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Labov, W., Yaeger, M. & Steiner, R. (1972). A quantitative study of sound change in progress. Volume I. Philadelphia: U.S. Regional Survey.Google Scholar
Leopold, W. F. (1947). Speech development of a bilingual child: a linguist's record. Vol. II: sound-learning of the two-year-old child. New York: AMS PressGoogle Scholar
Lisker, L. & Abramson, A. S. (1964). A cross-language study of voicing in initial stops: acoustical measurements. Word 20. 384422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lisker, L. (1967 a). Some affects of context on VOT in English stops. L&S 10. 128.Google Scholar
Lisker, L. (1967 b). The voicing dimension: some experiments in comparative phonetics. Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences. Prague: Academic Publishing House of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences (1970: 563–7).Google Scholar
Macken, M. A. (1978). Permitted complexity in phonological development: one child's acquisition of Spanish consonants. Lingua 44. 219–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Major, R. C. (1977). Phonological differentiation of a bilingual child. Ohio State University Working Papers in Linguistics 22. 88122.Google Scholar
Moslin, B. J. (1976). Development of the voiced-voiceless contrast in English stops: a VOT analysis of two mother-child dyads. Paper presented to the 7th meeting of the Northeast Linguistic Society.Google Scholar
Moslin, B. J. & Nigro, G. (1976). Apical stop production of mothers to their children at 10 months and 16 months: a VOT analysis. Paper presented at the 1st Annual Boston University Conference on Child Language Development.Google Scholar
Pisoni, D. B. (1977). Identification and discrimination of the relative onset time of two component tones: implications for voicing perception in stops. JAcS 61. 1352–6.Google ScholarPubMed
Pisoni, D. B. & Lazarus, J. H. (1974). Categorical and noncategorical modes of speech perception along the voicing continuum. JAcS 55. 328–33.Google ScholarPubMed
Smith, B. (1975). Effects of recent context and sex on VOT in initial voiced labial stop consonants in English: preliminary observations. Texas Linguistic Forum. 2. 152–60.Google Scholar
Smith, N. V. (1973). The acquisition of phonology: a case study. Cambridge: C.U.P.Google Scholar
Smith, N. V. (1978). Lexical representation and the acquisition of phonology. Forum Lecture delivered at the LSA Linguistic Institute, Urbana Illinois.Google Scholar
Velten, H. V. (1943). The growth of phonemic and lexical patterns in infant language. Lg 19. 281–92.Google Scholar
Vihman, M. M. (1978). Consonant harmony: its scope and function in child language. In Greenberg, J. P., Ferguson, C. A. & Moravcsik, E. A. (eds). Universals of human language. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Zlatin, M. A. (1974). Voicing contrast: perceptual and productive voice onset time characteristics of adults. JAcS 56. 981–94.Google ScholarPubMed
Zlatin, M. A. & Koenigsknecht, R. A. (1976). Development of the voicing contrast: a comparison of voice onset time in stop perception and production. JSHR 19. 93111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar