Gesture and intonation are "sister systems" of infant communication: Evidence from regression patterns of language development [0.03%]
手势和语调是婴儿交流的"姐妹系统"——来自语言发展回归模式的证据
David P Snow
David P Snow
This study investigates infants' transition from nonverbal to verbal communication using evidence from regression patterns. As an example of regressions, prelinguistic infants learning American Sign Language (ASL) use pointing gestures to c...
Phonotactic information in the temporal organization of Standard Austrian German and the Viennese dialect [0.03%]
标准奥地利德语和维也纳方言中音系信息的时域组织
Sylvia Moosmüller,Julia Brandstätter
Sylvia Moosmüller
The current contribution analyses quantifying prosodic aspects in two Middle Bavarian varieties, Standard Austrian German and the Viennese dialect. State of the art phonological accounts of the Middle Bavarian dialects assume a mutual inter...
Bruno Galantucci,Carrie Theisen,Elkin Dario Gutierrez et al.
Bruno Galantucci et al.
We present a study aimed at investigating how novel signs emerge and spread through a community of interacting individuals. Ten triads of participants played a game in which players created novel signs in order to communicate with each othe...
The reality of phonological forms: a reply to Port [0.03%]
有关音系形式现实性的商榷答复ポートの论文に対する答复: 音系形態のリアリティについて
Carol A Fowler
Carol A Fowler
I suggest four grounds on which an argument can be made that phonological language forms are not merely emergent properties of the public language use of members of a language community. They are: 1) the existence of spontaneous errors of s...
Productive reduplication in a fundamentally monosyllabic language [0.03%]
根本单音节语言中的 productive reduplication 现象研究
Ronnie B Wilbur
Ronnie B Wilbur
The question to be addressed in this paper is how a language which is fundamentally monosyllabic in structure can have about a dozen different reduplication types with at least eight different linguistic functions. The language under discus...
Gregory K Iverson,Sang-Cheol Ahn
Gregory K Iverson
Assuming a framework of privative features, this paper interprets two apparently disparate phenomena in English phonology as structurally related: the lexically specific voicing of fricatives in plural nouns like wives or thieves and the pr...