Stockholm university

Research project Learning to focus – How Swedish children produce and comprehend contrastive intonation

Speakers make use of intonation in order to highlight the most important part of an utterance (its focus) and listeners rely on it in order to comprehend the message. In this project we study how Swedish kindergarten children develop the skill to produce and to interpret focus intonation, be means of, among others, eye-tracking experiments.

People use prosody – the melody and rhythm of speech – to highlight the most important part of an utterance (its focus), and rely on prosody to comprehend the message. Prosodic focusing takes different forms in different languages or dialects.

We investigate effects of such differences on children’s development toward adult mastery of focus prosody comparing Stockholm and Skåne Swedish which differ in prosodic typology, while keeping other important linguistic features constant. We will record young children and adults speaking these varieties, and test their comprehension using eye tracking.

Our research questions center on the relation between how a child produces focus prosody, and how it can make use of it in speech comprehension. Is one acquired before the other? Is their acquisition influenced by the melodic shape of the variety's particular focus prosody? The project will add to our general understanding of how input properties affect language acquisition.

Project members

Project managers

Gilbert Ambrazaitis

Associate professor

Linnæus University, Department of Swedish

Members

Nadja Althaus

Dr

University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

Anna Sara H. Romøren

Associate professor

Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway

Susan Sayehli

Universitetslektor

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism
Susan Sayehli

Publications

Literature Research project: Learning to focus

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