The acquisition of syllable-level timing contrasts by English- and Spanish-speaking bilingual children with normal hearing and English- and Spanish-speaking bilingual children with cochlear implants

We examined the Spanish productions of four syllable-level timing parameters by bilingual English- and Spanish-speaking children with normal hearing (NH group, henceforth) and bilingual English- and Spanish-speaking children with cochlear implants (CI group, henceforth) during the stages of phonological development. The four temporal variables related to syllable structure include: (1) lateral duration in simplex and complex onsets, (2) vowel duration following simplex and complex onsets, (3) voice onset time (VOT, henceforth) for stops in simplex and complex onsets, and (4) interplateau intervals (IPI, henceforth), or the latency between the release of articulatory constriction of the first consonant (C1, henceforth) in a C1C2 sequence and the onset of articulatory constriction of the second consonant (C2, henceforth). Our motivation for the study is to address (1) how, and at what age, children acquire and produce the temporal patterns related to syllable structure of their native language(s), (2) the effects of language interference in the acquisition of timing parameters by bilingual children, and (3) whether hearing impairment impedes correct acquisition and categorization of temporal cues related to syllables. Results of the Spanish production tasks show that the NH groups’ productions were in general commensurate with data for monolingual productions, and the results of the CI group’s productions show general concurrence with the NH group. However, some differences...
Source: Journal of Phonetics - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research