Babbling in the Manual Mode: Evidence for the Ontogeny of Language
- 22 March 1991
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 251 (5000) , 1493-1496
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.2006424
Abstract
Infant vocal babbling has been assumed to be a speech-based phenomenon that reflects the maturation of the articulatory apparatus responsible for spoken language production. Manual babbling has now been reported to occur in deaf children exposed to signed languages from birth. The similarities between manual and vocal babbling suggest that babbling is a product of an amodal, brain-based language capacity under maturational control, in which phonetic and syllabic units are produced by the infant as a first step toward building a mature linguistic system. Contrary to prevailing accounts of the neurological basis of babbling in language ontogeny, the speech modality is not critical in babbling. Rather, babbling is tied to the abstract linguistic structure of language and to an expressive capacity capable of processing different types of signals (signed or spoken).Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Role of Audition in Infant BabblingChild Development, 1988
- On the autonomy of language and gesture: Evidence from the acquisition of personal pronouns in American sign languageCognition, 1987
- Early word meanings: The case of object namesCognitive Psychology, 1987
- Phonological development from babbling to speech: Common tendencies and individual differencesApplied Psycholinguistics, 1986
- The motor theory of speech perception revisedCognition, 1985
- From Babbling to Speech: A Re-Assessment of the Continuity IssueLanguage, 1985
- Think and Believe: Sequentiality in American Sign LanguageLanguage, 1984
- Operating principles in repetitive babbling: A cognitive continuity approachCognition, 1982
- Maturational determinants of language growthCognition, 1981
- Rules and representationsBehavioral and Brain Sciences, 1980