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Spoken word recognition by Latino children learning Spanish as their first language

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2007

NEREYDA HURTADO
Affiliation:
Stanford University
VIRGINIA A. MARCHMAN
Affiliation:
Stanford University
ANNE FERNALD
Affiliation:
Stanford University

Abstract

Research on the development of efficiency in spoken language understanding has focused largely on middle-class children learning English. Here we extend this research to Spanish-learning children (n=49; M=2;0; range=1;3–3;1) living in the USA in Latino families from primarily low socioeconomic backgrounds. Children looked at pictures of familiar objects while listening to speech naming one of the objects. Analyses of eye movements revealed developmental increases in the efficiency of speech processing. Older children and children with larger vocabularies were more efficient at processing spoken language as it unfolds in real time, as previously documented with English learners. Children whose mothers had less education tended to be slower and less accurate than children of comparable age and vocabulary size whose mothers had more schooling, consistent with previous findings of slower rates of language learning in children from disadvantaged backgrounds. These results add to the cross-linguistic literature on the development of spoken word recognition and to the study of the impact of socioeconomic status (SES) factors on early language development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2007 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

We are grateful to the many children and parents who participated in this research, to Drs Fernando Mendoza, Deanne Perez-Granados and Guadalupe Valdes, and to the staff of the Ravenswood Clinic, the East Palo Alto Library, East Palo Alto Head Start and Family Connections of San Mateo County. Special thanks to Dr Renate Zangl and to Guadalupe Makasyuk for their invaluable contributions on many levels, as well as to Ana Luz Portillo, Kirsten Thorpe, Rebecca Wedel, Casey Williams, Sara Hernandez, Daisy Rios, Veronica Trejo, Natalie Rios, Monica Prieto, Irene Guerra and the staff of the Center for Infant Studies at Stanford University. This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health to Anne Fernald (HD 42235) with a Postdoctoral Research Supplement for Underrepresented Minorities to Nereyda Hurtado.