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MacNeilage, P. F. and Davis, B. L. (2000) On the origin of internal structure of word forms. Science, 288:527--531.

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Babbling occurs during the period of roughly 7 to 12 months of age.

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First (single) words are produced during the period of roughly 12 to 18 months of age.

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B. L. Davis, P. F. MacNeilage, C. L. Matyear, in preparation.

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A preliminary report (7) on 4 of the 10 subjects in (5) shows similar results to those found for the larger group.

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P. F. MacNeilage, B. L. Davis, C. L. Matyear, Speech Comm. 22, 269 (1997) .

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C. Gildersleeve, thesis, University of Texas, in preparation.

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E. Teixera and B. L. Davis, in preparation.

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Four other studies (12-15) often confirm our results but also show a number of counterexamples and null findings, many of which may be a result of methodological factors. [This issue is discussed in (26).]

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The term "fronting," coined by Ingram (19), refers to the tendency for the first consonant in the word to have a more anterior place of articulation than the second.

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According to frame/content theory, mandibular cyclicity may have evolved from ingestive processes (chewing, sucking, licking) through visuofacial communicative gestures (e.g., lip-smacks), common in other primates, before being paired with vocal-fold vibrations to form protosyllables.

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P. F. MacNeilage and B. L. Davis, in Developmental Neurocognition: Speech and Face Processing in the First Year of Life, B. de Boysson-Bardies, S. de Schonen, P. Jusczyk, P. F. MacNeilage, J. Morton, Eds. (Kluwer Academic, Dordrecht, Netherlands, 1993), pp. 123-137.

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For many years, the accepted view [e.g., (45)] was that true speech became possible not because of organizational changes but because the evolution of a two-tube vocal tract made enough sounds available to produce a full language. In particular, the capacity to produce the three "point vowels" (those in "beet," "boot," and "box") has been considered criterial for a full speech capacity. But computer modeling studies have now shown (48) that the one-tubed vocal tract of a newborn infant is capable of producing the point vowels. The criterion for whether the model produces the point vowels is perceptual. We have heard a recording of the output of the model and concur that it does. The one-tubed vocal tracts of monkeys have shapes similar to that of the newborn infant, implying that they too are anatomically capable of making the point vowels.

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