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Syllable in Speech Production: Perspectives on the Frame Content Theory [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Krisztina Zajdo, Universityof Wyoming, USA.University of Wyoming), Edited by (Barbara L. Davis, University of Texas at Austin, USA)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 480 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 1050 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Feb-2008
  • Kirjastus: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0805854797
  • ISBN-13: 9780805854794
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 480 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 1050 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Feb-2008
  • Kirjastus: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0805854797
  • ISBN-13: 9780805854794
Teised raamatud teemal:

As a testament to the scope of Peter MacNeilage’s scholarly work across his 40 year career, contributions to this tribute volume represent a broad spectrum of the seminal issues addressed by phonetic and evolutionary science over a number of years. Approaches to the problems raised by attempting to understand these fundamental topics are illustrated in the broad diversity of paradigms represented in the volume. This diversity in itself is a tribute to the breadth of scholarly questions pursued by MacNeilage across his career.

Chapters are arranged around five thematic areas. Two themes, Evolutionary Perspectives on Speech Production and Acquisition of Speech, reflect the major thrust of Peter’s scholarly career over the past 25 years. The other themes are reflective of the broad implications of MacNeilage’s work for scholars in disparate scientific domains. One of the strengths of this volume is the unitary focus of contributions by scientists from diverse scientific backgrounds in considering the applicability of the Frame Content Theory within their own scholarly perspectives. Thematic strands in the volume include:

  • - Evolutionary Perspectives on Speech Production
  • - Neurobiological Aspects of Speech
  • - Perception / Action Relationships
  • - Acquisition of Speech Production Skill
  • - Modeling and Movement
  • - Alternative Perspectives on the Syllable.
Foreword ix
Bjorn Lindblom
Preface xxi
Barbara L. Davis
Krisztina Zajdo
List of Contributors
xxxi
Overview
The Frame/Content Theory
1(28)
Peter F. MacNeilage
I: Evolutionary Perspectives on Speech Development
The Origins of Syllabification in Human Infancy and in Human Evolution
29(34)
D. Kimbrough Oller
Ulrike Griebel
Simple Combinatorial Considerations Challenge Ruhlen's Mother Tongue Theory
63(30)
Louis-Jean Boe
Pierre Bessiere
Nadia Ladjili
Nicolas Audibert
The Frame/Content Theory and the Emergence of Consonants
93(18)
Didier Demolin
Lipsmacking and Babbling: Syllables, Sociality, and Survival
111(22)
John L. Locke
II: Neurobiological Aspects of Speech Production
Mirror Neurons and Evolution of Communication and Language
133(22)
Leonardo Fogassi
Pier Francesco Ferrari
Syllables in Psycholinguistic Theory: Now You See Them, Now You Don't
155(24)
Niels O. Schiller
III: Perception /Action Relationships
The Emergent Syllable
179(8)
John J. Ohala
Co-occurrence Patterns in the Babbling of Children with a Cochlear Implant
187(18)
Karen Schauwers
Paul J. Govaerts
Steven Gillis
The Development of Consonant Vowel Syllables in Children Following Cochlear Implantation
205(20)
Jan Allison Moore
Frames and Babbling in Hearing and Deaf Infants
225(20)
Florien J. van Beinum
IV: Acquisition of Speech
Teething, Chewing, and the Babbled Syllable
245(28)
Jeannette M. van der Stelt
An Acoustical Analysis of Consonant-Vowel Cooccurrences in Babbling: Coronal and Dorsal Contexts
273(20)
Christine Matyear
Syllables, Segments, and Sequences: Phonological Patterns in the Words of Young Children Acquiring American English
293(34)
Carol Stoel-Gammon
Beate Peter
V: Modeling and Movement
The Target Hypothesis, Dynamic Specification and Segmental Independence
327(28)
Bjorn Lindblom
Jaw Cycles and Linguistic Syllables in Adult English
355(24)
Melissa A. Redford
Paul van Donkelaar
VI: Alternative Perspectives on the Syllable
The Syllable in Sign Language: Considering the Other Natural Language Modality
379(30)
Wendy Sandler
When the Babble Syllable Feeds the Foot in a Point
409(20)
Christian Abry
Virginie Ducey
Anne Vilain
Claire Lalevee
Author Index 429(10)
Subject Index 439


Dr. Barbara Davis is a Professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at The University of Texas at Austin. She has published over 90 articles and book chapters and is the winner of a variety of research and teaching awards. Dr. Davis is interested in emergence of complex serial vocal patterns underlying young children's acquisition of language capacities. She has evaluated these issues in ontogeny, initial stages of vocal acquisition, in typically developing infants and young children in English and diverse language environments. To consider the role of input in acquisition she has also studied emergence of speech production capacities in young infants with varying degrees of hearing loss. Davis has also considered the implications of ontogeny in modern infants for understanding phylogenic origins of vocal system use for communication in early humans.





Dr. Krisztina Zajdo is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Communication Disorders at the University of Wyoming. She has research interests in the areas of phonological development and disorders with a special interest in cross-linguistic paradigms. Her current research projects focus on phonological development in typically developing children in Hungarian. She is presently involved in several international cooperative research projects (with the Universities of Amsterdam and Turku) focused on development of the vowel inventory in monolingual children acquiring Dutch and Finnish. Her most recent publications focus on the acquisition of the vowel inventory in Hungarian-speaking children.