Neurodevelopmental Preparedness for Language in the Neonatal Brain

Posted: 14 Dec 2021

See all articles by Caroline Nallet

Caroline Nallet

University of Padua

Judit Gervain

University of Padua; University of Paris

Date Written: December 2021

Abstract

Neonates show broad-based, universal speech perception abilities, allowing them to acquire any language. Moreover, an increasing body of research shows that prenatal experience with speech, which is a low-pass signal mainly preserving prosody, already shapes those abilities. In this review, we first provide a summary of the empirical evidence available today on newborns’ universal and experience-modulated speech perception abilities. We then interpret these findings in a new framework, focusing on the role of the prenatal prosodic experience in speech perception development. We argue that the chronological sequence of infants’ experience with speech, starting before birth with a low-pass filtered signal and continuing with the full-band signal after birth, sets up the prosodic hierarchy and a cascade of embedded neural oscillations as its brain correlate, laying the foundations for language acquisition. Prosody, constituting infants’ very first experience with language, may thus play a fundamental role in speech perception and language development.

Suggested Citation

Nallet, Caroline and Gervain, Judit, Neurodevelopmental Preparedness for Language in the Neonatal Brain (December 2021). Annual Review of Developmental Psychology, Vol. 3, pp. 41-58, 2021, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3984773 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-devpsych-050620-025732

Caroline Nallet (Contact Author)

University of Padua ( email )

Via 8 Febbraio
Padova, Vicenza 2-35122
Italy

Judit Gervain

University of Padua ( email )

Via 8 Febbraio
Padova, Vicenza 2-35122
Italy

University of Paris

Paris
France

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