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Articles

Markedness and implicational relationships in phonological development: A cross-linguistic investigation

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Pages 669-682 | Published online: 20 Dec 2020
 

Abstract

Purpose

The complexity approach to speech disorders, based on the theoretical notion of phonological markedness, has been gaining interest over the last decade. In a nutshell, this approach suggests that the acquisition of phonologically marked units (e.g. complex onsets) implies the acquisition of less marked ones (e.g. singleton onsets). However, because the notion of markedness is, itself, subject to controversies, we need to constrain what types of implications can be generalised among language learners, within and across languages.

Method

We report on longitudinal data from one phonologically-disordered and five typically-developing children documented across four different languages (English, French, German, Portuguese), using data from the PhonBank database (https://phonbank.talkbank.org). Using the Phon software program (https://www.phon.ca), we systematically analysed each longitudinal study for consonants in singleton onsets and codas as well as in onset clusters.

Result

The implicational relationships supported by our study involve units of similar types (e.g. relations between different segmental categories), while relationships that involve different types of units or processes cannot be generalised across learners.

Conclusion

A better understanding of implicational relationships makes the complexity approach more predictive of developmental patterns of phonology and related phonological disorders.

Acknowledgements

We owe special thanks to the editors of this special issue as well as to two anonymous reviewers for their useful comments and generous suggestions. We are also thankful to all of the scholars involved in the building and generous sharing of the datasets we used for analysis.

Notes

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by a Doctoral Fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada to the first author and by a grant from the National Institutes of Health [R01 HD051698-11] to the second author. All errors or omissions are our own.

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