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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Apr 30, 2026

Ultrasound Images of the Tongue: A Tutorial for Assessment and Remediation of Speech Sound Errors
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The coronal fricative problem.

Daniel A Dinnsen1, Michael C Dow1, Judith A Gierut1

  • 1Indiana University.

Lingua. International Review of General Linguistics. Revue Internationale De Linguistique Generale
|May 3, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study explores sound errors in young children acquiring English, focusing on coronal fricatives. Findings reveal a "developmental conspiracy" where children

Keywords:
Chain shiftConspiracyError patternsOpacityOptimality TheoryTransparencyTypology

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Area of Science:

  • Child language acquisition
  • Phonological development
  • Speech sound disorders

Background:

  • Early sound systems in children often exhibit predictable error patterns.
  • Coronal fricatives (e.g., /s/, /z/, /θ/, /ð/) are common targets for phonological processes.
  • Understanding these errors is crucial for diagnosing and treating speech sound disorders.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate predicted versus attested error patterns of coronal fricatives in monolingual English-acquiring children.
  • To identify and analyze instances of a "developmental conspiracy" in phonological acquisition.
  • To examine the life-cycle of phonological conspiracies using cross-sectional and longitudinal data.

Main Methods:

  • Cross-sectional study of 234 children (ages 3;0 to 7;9) with phonological delays.
  • Analysis of error patterns involving coronal fricatives as targets and repairs.
  • Supplemental longitudinal data collection to replicate cross-sectional findings.
  • Theoretical modeling using a modified Optimality Theory with Candidate Chains.

Main Results:

  • Identified specific instantiations of a "developmental conspiracy" in children's phonological systems.
  • Observed typological anomalies in fricative error patterns.
  • Cross-sectional and longitudinal data confirmed the existence and replication of these conspiracies.
  • Demonstrated that certain anomalies align with theoretical predictions.

Conclusions:

  • The study provides evidence for a "developmental conspiracy" influencing phonological error patterns in English-acquiring children.
  • Findings offer insights into the systematic nature of speech sound acquisition and delay.
  • A modified Optimality Theory with Candidate Chains effectively accounts for observed phonological anomalies.