Robert Daland, UCLA
What's in "the
input"? A comparison of ADS and CDS
It has been
claimed that child-directed speech differs from spontaneous adult-directed
speech at multiple levels, possibly in a way that might facilitate language
acquisition. There is now considerable cross-linguistic evidence of ADS/CDS
differences at the phonetic level. However, only one study, Lee & Davis
(2008), have examined differences at the phonological level. The present work
addresses this issue by considering a variety of phonological distributions,
both in adult-directed speech, and in a corpus of speech uttered in the
presence of a child.
METHOD: The
CELEX dictionary was used to obtain phonological information from adult- and
child-input corpora. Various type and token distributions were collected,
including stress pattern, CV structure, word-initial and -final segmental,
place, and manner distributions.
RESULTS AND
DISCUSSION: A conspicuously large number of statistically significant
differences were found, some in accord with previous findings by Lee &
Davis (2008), and some in the opposite direction. It is argued that many of the
significant differences do not reflect true *genre* differences, and rather
arise from inappropriate assumptions of the language model.