References
- Banikiotes F. G., Montgomery A. A., Banikiotes P. G. ‘Male and female auditory reinforcement of infant vocalizations’. Dev. Psych. 1972; 6: 476–8
- Bloom L. Language development: form and function in emerging grammars. M.I.T., Cambridge, Mass 1970
- Crystal D. Prosodic systems and intonation in English. C.U.P., London 1969
- Friedlander B. Z. ‘Receptive language development in infancy: issues and problems’. MerrillPalmer Quarterly 1970; 16: 7–51
- Fry D. B. The development of the phonological system in the normal and the deaf child. The genesis of language, F. Smith, G. A. Miller. M.I.T., Cambridge, Mass. 1966; 187–206
- Kaplan E. L., Kaplan G. A. Is there any such thing as a pre-linguistic child?. Human development and cognitive processes, J. Eliot. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, New York 1970
- Lenneberg E. H. Biological foundations of language. Wiley, New York 1967
- Lewis M. M. Infant speech: A study of the beginnings of language. Harcourt Brace, New York 1936
- Lieberman P. Intonation, perception, and language. M.I.T., Cambridge, Mass. 1967
- Lotz J., Abramson A. S., Gerstman L., Ingemann F., Nemser W. J. The perception of English stops by speakers of English, Spanish, Hungarian and Thai. Lg. & Sp. 1960; 3: 71–7
- Luchsinger R., Arnold G. E. Voice speech language. Belmont, Calif: Wadsworth;, G. E. Arnold, E. R.-beiner Fink. Constable, London 1965
- Lynip A. W. ‘The use of magnetic devices in the collection and analysis of the preverbal utterances of an infant’. Genet. Psych. Monogs. 1951; 44: 221–62
- Manolson A. 'Comparative study of intonation patterns in normal hearing and hearing-impaired infants. paper presented to VII th Int. Cong. Phon. Sci., Montreal, 1971
- Menyuk P. The acquisition and development of language. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs 1971
- Ostwald P. F., Phibbs R., Fox S. 'Diagnostic use of infant cry. Biol, neonat. 1968; 13: 68–82
- Rebelsky F., Hanks C. ‘Fathers’ verbal interaction with infants in the first three months of life. Ch. Dev. 1971; 42: 63–68
- Sherman M. The differentiation of emotional responses in infants: I. Judgments of emotional responses from motion picture views and from actual observation. II. The ability of observers to judge emotional characteristics of the crying infants and of the voice of an adult. J. comp. Psych. 1927; 7: 265–84
- Tomlinson-Keasey C. ‘Conditioning of infant vocalizations in the home environment’. J. Genet. Psych. 1972; 120: 75–82
- Vuorenkoski V., Lind J., Wasz-H6ckert O., Partanen T. J. Cry score: a method of evaluating the degree of abnormality in the pain cry response of the newborn and young infant. QPSR, Dept. of Speech Comm., Royal Inst, of Technology, Stockholm. 1971; 68–75
- Wasz-Höckert O., Lind J., Vuorenkoski V., Partanen T. J., Valanne E. The infant cry: a spectrographic and auditory analysis. Clinics in Developmental Medicine. Heinemann Medical Books. 1968; 29
- Wasz-Höckert O., Partanen T. J., Vuorenkoski V., Valanne E., Michelsson K. ‘Effect of training on ability to identify preverbal vocalizations’. Dev. Med. Ch. Neurol. 1964; 6: 393–6
- Weir R. Language in the crib. Mouton, The Hague 1962
- Wolff P. H. The natural history of crying and other vocalizations in early infancy. Determinants of infant behaviour, B. Foss. Methuen, London 1969; 81–109