A new view of language acquisition

  1. Patricia K. Kuhl*
  1. Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences and Center for Mind, Brain, and Learning, University of Washington, Box 357920, Seattle, WA 98195

Abstract

At the forefront of debates on language are new data demonstrating infants' early acquisition of information about their native language. The data show that infants perceptually “map” critical aspects of ambient language in the first year of life before they can speak. Statistical properties of speech are picked up through exposure to ambient language. Moreover, linguistic experience alters infants' perception of speech, warping perception in the service of language. Infants' strategies are unexpected and unpredicted by historical views. A new theoretical position has emerged, and six postulates of this position are described.

Footnotes

  • * E-mail: pkkuhl{at}u.washington.edu.

  • This paper was presented at the National Academy of Sciences colloquium “Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration,” held May 19–21, 2000, at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA.

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