Faster and Smoother: Fluency in Chinese Child-directed Speech

Mengru Han, Lianghui Yang, Yan Gu

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Child-directed speech (CDS) is often believed to have a slower speaking rate than adult-directed speech (ADS). This study examined the fluency between CDS and ADS as well as the individual differences in mothers’ speaking rates. We annotated 2917 utterances in a corpus of Chinese ADS and CDS, where 19 mothers told the same story to their 24-month-old children and an adult. We coded and compared the fluency measures between ADS and CDS: speech rate (SR, including utterance-internal pauses), articulation rate (AR, excluding utterance-internal pauses), frequencies of silent pauses, filled pauses, repairs, and repetitions. We have three main findings: (1) CDS was generally more fluent than ADS, with fewer silent and filled pauses. (2) Contrary to common belief, only 7 out of the 19 participants showed a decreased SR and AR in CDS. (3) There were no significant differences in SR or AR between CDS and ADS when the utterance length was shorter than 4 syllables, whereas CDS was significantly faster than ADS when utterances were longer than 5 syllables. This suggests that Chinese CDS is not slower but instead faster than ADS. These findings highlight language-specific and individual variations in the temporal aspects of CDS.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6-10
Number of pages5
JournalProceedings of the International Conference on Speech Prosody
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024
Event12th International Conference on Speech Prosody, Speech Prosody 2024 - Leiden, Netherlands
Duration: 2 Jul 20255 Jul 2025

Keywords

  • Chinese
  • child-directed speech
  • fluency
  • speech rate

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