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Towards a fuller integration of respiratory rhythms into research on infant vocal and motor development
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Towards a fuller integration of respiratory rhythms into research on infant vocal and motor development

Susanne Fuchs, Elina Rubertus, Laura Koenig and Aude Noiray
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol.1556(1)
2025

Abstract

Humanities and Social Sciences Linguistics Psychology
Rhythm organizes many human motor activities from before birth and continues to shape development throughout infancy. In this review, we examine the role of rhythmic processes in early vocal development, drawing on research from motor control, physiology, speech and language acquisition. We propose that respiration functions as a crucial core of early rhythmic coordination, linking vocalizations and bodily movements into an integrated system. At present, our understanding of how infant breathing for speech develops during the first year of life remains imprecise. However, respiration, an inherently flexible and adaptive system, may provide a temporal framework within which speech articulation and motor actions become progressively aligned. During canonical babbling, a key milestone in language acquisition, repetitive adult-like syllables emerge from rhythmic motor actions. The advent of this behavior presumably reflects developing coordination among motor, respiratory, and vocal subsystems. This three-way coordination creates the multimodal foundation of language. In this perspective, the respiratory rhythm is fundamental to early vocal development. Along with reviewing past work and its limitations, we suggest directions for future work to better address how the respiratory rhythm subserves developing linguistic and non-linguistic actions in infant development.
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