Home
Scholarly Works
Chapter 5 Rules for Listening in Infancy
Journal article

Chapter 5 Rules for Listening in Infancy

Abstract

In the present review, we outline a set of principles governing infants' deployment of attention to auditory events. Infants initially look in the direction of sounding objects, later reaching for the objects. They find some sound qualities highly salient, such as female voices in general and the mother's voice in particular. Infants selectively attend to the pitch contours and rhythms of animated speech and musical sequences. They encode finer details of some musical sequences, notably those typical of their culture. Moreover, simplicity or familiarity of the sequences and greater maturity of the infant lead to more comprehensive auditory processing. Finally, we identify a number of parallels between infants' processing of speech and music, and propose directions for future research.

Authors

Trehub SE; Trainor LJ

Journal

Advances in Psychology, Vol. 69, , pp. 87–119

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 1990

DOI

10.1016/s0166-4115(08)60452-5

ISSN

0166-4115
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team