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首页> 外文期刊>Developmental psychology >Selective Attention to the Mouth of Talking Faces in Monolinguals and Bilinguals Aged 5 Months to 5 Years
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Selective Attention to the Mouth of Talking Faces in Monolinguals and Bilinguals Aged 5 Months to 5 Years

机译:在5个月至5年的单声道和双语中选择性地关注谈话面的谈话面孔

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A talking face provides redundant cues on the mouth that might support language learning and highly salient social cues in the eyes. What drives children's looking toward the mouth versus eyes of a talking face? This study reports data from 292 children who viewed faces speaking English, French, and Russian. We investigated the impact of children's age (5 months to 5 years) and language background (monolingual English, monolingual French, bilingual English-French), and the speaker's language (dominant, nondominant, or nonnative) relative to children's native language(s). Data from 129 bilingual adults were also collected for comparison. Five-month-olds showed balanced attention to the eyes and mouth, but children up to 5 years tended to be most interested in the mouth. In contrast, adults were most interested in the eyes. We found little evidence for different patterns of attention for monolinguals versus bilinguals, or to a native versus a nonnative speaker. Using percentile scores, monolinguals with larger productive vocabularies looked more at the mouth, while bilinguals with larger comprehension vocabularies looked marginally less at the mouth, although both effects were small and not as robust with raw vocabulary scores. Children showed large but stable individual variability in their face scanning patterns across different speakers. Our results show that the way that children allocate their attention to talking faces continues to change from infancy through the preschool years and beyond. Future studies will need to go beyond looking at bilingualism, speaker language, and vocabulary size to understand what drives children's in-the-moment attention to talking faces.
机译:一个谈话的脸在口中提供了冗余的暗示,可能会支持语言学习和眼中的高度突出的社会线索。驱动子女朝着嘴巴的眼睛看着谈话的眼睛吗?本研究报告了292名观众讲述英语,法国和俄语的儿童的数据。我们调查了儿童年龄(5个月至5年)和语言背景(单语英语,单语法,双语英国语)以及相对于儿童母语的语言(Monoling,Nondominant或Nonnative)的影响。还收集了来自129名双语成人的数据进行比较。五个月大的人对眼睛和嘴巴均衡,但长达5年的孩子往往对口腔最感兴趣。相比之下,成年人对眼睛最感兴趣。我们发现了单声道与双语的不同关注模式的少数证据,或者对原生与非健康扬声器。使用百分位数,具有较大的高效词汇表的单语言看起来更令人震惊,而具有更大的理解词汇的双语在口腔上略微少得多,尽管这两个效果都很小,而且与原始词汇分数不那么强大。孩子们在不同扬声器上显示出脸部扫描模式的大而稳定的个性变异性。我们的结果表明,儿童分配他们注意谈话面孔的方式继续通过学龄前及以后从婴儿期发生变化。未来的研究需要超越观察双语,扬声器语言和词汇规模,以了解驱动儿童的谈话面孔的内容。

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