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Pre‐schoolers use head gestures rather than prosodic cues to highlight important information in speech
Author(s) -
EsteveGibert Núria,
Lœvenbruck Hélène,
Dohen Marion,
D'Imperio Mariapaola
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
developmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.801
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1467-7687
pISSN - 1363-755X
DOI - 10.1111/desc.13154
Subject(s) - gesture , head (geology) , psychology , focus (optics) , syllable , duration (music) , referent , speech production , context (archaeology) , set (abstract data type) , phrase , linguistics , speech recognition , computer science , acoustics , paleontology , philosophy , physics , geomorphology , optics , biology , programming language , geology
Previous evidence suggests that children's mastery of prosodic modulations to signal the informational status of discourse referents emerges quite late in development. In the present study, we investigate the children's use of head gestures as it compares to prosodic cues to signal a referent as being contrastive relative to a set of possible alternatives. A group of French‐speaking pre‐schoolers were audio‐visually recorded while playing in a semi‐spontaneous but controlled production task, to elicit target words in the context of broad focus, contrastive focus, or corrective focus utterances. We analysed the acoustic features of the target words (syllable duration and word‐level pitch range), as well as the head gesture features accompanying these target words (head gesture type, alignment patterns with speech). We found that children's production of head gestures, but not their use of either syllable duration or word‐level pitch range, was affected by focus condition. Children mostly aligned head gestures with relevant speech units, especially when the target word was in phrase‐final position. Moreover, the presence of a head gesture was linked to greater syllable duration patterns in all focus conditions. Our results show that (a) 4‐ and 5‐year‐old French‐speaking children use head gestures rather than prosodic cues to mark the informational status of discourse referents, (b) the use of head gestures may gradually entrain the production of adult‐like prosodic features, and that (c) head gestures with no referential relation with speech may serve a linguistic structuring function in communication, at least during language development.

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