Hands-on babbling.Hands-on babbling babbling Neurology Quasi-random vocalizations in infants that precede language acquisition. See Lalling stage. Research conducted several years ago indicated that the seemingly random babbling of babies traverses a sequence of increasingly complex vocal stages, leading to the first spoken words around age 1 (SN: 6/21/86, p.390). But a new pilot study suggests babies can babble without ever making a sound, thanks to a generalized gen·er·al·ized adj. 1. Involving an entire organ, as when an epileptic seizure involves all parts of the brain. 2. Not specifically adapted to a particular environment or function; not specialized. 3. , innate language capacity in the brain. Psychologists Laura Ann Petitto and Paula E. Marentette of McGill University McGill University, at Montreal, Que., Canada; coeducational; chartered 1821, opened 1829. It was named for James McGill, who left a bequest to establish it. Its real development dates from 1855 when John W. Dawson became principal. in Montreal studied five infants, two of whom were deaf. The deaf babies had deaf parents and acquired American Sign Language American Sign Language n. The primary sign language used by deaf and hearing-impaired people in the United States and Canada. American Sign Language (ASL), n. as their first language; the three hearing babies had hearing parents who spoke either French or English at home and did not expose their infants to sign language. On three occasions, when the babies reached the ages of about 10, 12 and 14 months, the researchers videotaped the children alone and with their p arents, then transcribed each infant's hand movements and vocalizations. Both hearing and deaf babies engaged in their own brand of babbling, Petitto and Marentette report in the March 22 SCIENCE. Hearing infants initially produced strings of sounds and syllables, emitting e·mit tr.v. e·mit·ted, e·mit·ting, e·mits 1. To give or send out (matter or energy): isotopes that emit radioactive particles; a stove emitting heat. 2. a. their first words
First Words is a Canadian hip hop group, consisting of Halifax beatmaker Jorun, DJ STV and emcees Sean One & Above. by age 1. The two deaf babies babbled with their hands, starting out with basic hand shapes for letters and numbers that they saw their parents use. Hand movements and shapes gradually grew more complex, with the first full-fledged linguistic signs emerging by age 1. These observations challenge the widespread assumption that babbling requires normal hearing and an ability to speak aloud, the investigators argue. The brain apparently possesses some type of unified capacity for learning both signed and spoken language, they propose. |
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