Infant directed speech is consistent with teaching
Baxter S. Eaves Jr., Naomi H. Feldman, Thomas L. Griffiths, Patrick, Shafto

TL;DR
This paper applies a formal teaching theory to analyze infant-directed speech (IDS), showing it shares features with optimal teaching data and can facilitate phonetic learning under certain conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a formal teaching framework to evaluate whether IDS is designed for teaching phonetic categories, providing a systematic and theoretically grounded approach.
Findings
IDS exhibits features of ideal teaching data.
Teaching data benefits phonetic classification for specific learners.
Transfer of IDS improves learning only for the targeted learner.
Abstract
Infant-directed speech (IDS) has distinctive properties that differ from adult-directed speech (ADS). Why it has these properties -- and whether they are intended to facilitate language learning -- is matter of contention. We argue that much of this disagreement stems from lack of a formal, guiding theory of how phonetic categories should best be taught to infant-like learners. In the absence of such a theory, researchers have relied on intuitions about learning to guide the argument. We use a formal theory of teaching, validated through experiments in other domains, as the basis for a detailed analysis of whether IDS is well-designed for teaching phonetic categories. Using the theory, we generate ideal data for teaching phonetic categories in English. We qualitatively compare the simulated teaching data with human IDS, finding that the teaching data exhibit many features of IDS,…
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