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Bénédicte de Boysson-Bardies
Researcher at Centre national de la recherche scientifique
Publications - 14
Citations - 1792
Bénédicte de Boysson-Bardies is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Babbling & Word recognition. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 14 publications receiving 1685 citations. Previous affiliations of Bénédicte de Boysson-Bardies include University of Paris.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A cross-language study of prosodic modifications in mothers' and fathers' speech to preverbal infants.
Anne Fernald,Traute Taeschner,Judy Dunn,Mechthild Papoušek,Bénédicte de Boysson-Bardies,Ikuko Fukui +5 more
TL;DR: Results showed cross-language consistency in the patterns of prosodic modification used in parental speech to infants, and suggested that language-specific variations are also important, and that the findings of the numerous studies of early language input based on American English are not necessarily generalisable to other cultures.
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A crosslinguistic investigation of vowel formants in babbling.
TL;DR: A cross-cultural investigation of the influence of target-language in babbling found evidence of differences between infants across language backgrounds, which parallel those found in adult speech in the corresponding languages.
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Discernible differences in the babbling of infants according to target language
TL;DR: The results show that certain language-specific metaphonological cues render this identification possible when the samples exhibit long and coherent intonation patterns, and these results seem to support the hypothesis of an early influence on babbling of the metaphonology characteristics of the target language.
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The format of representation of recognized words in infants' early receptive lexicon
TL;DR: This article showed that infants' word representations in 11-month-olds are segmentally underspecified and suggest that they are all the more under-specified when infants engage in recognizing words rather than merely attending to meaningless speech sounds.
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Emergence of an early receptive lexicon: Infants' recognition of words
TL;DR: This paper found that infants' interest for familiar words, chosen in the early productive vocabulary of young infants, against rare words infrequent in French usage, revealed the existence of a developing receptive lexicon by 11 months of age.