Everyday music in infancy

Infants enculturate to their soundscape over the first year of life, yet theories of how they do so rarely make contact with details about the sounds available in everyday life. Here, we report on properties of a ubiquitous early ecology in which foundational skills get built: music. We captured day...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fausey, C.M (Author), Mendoza, J.K (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons Inc 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:View Fulltext in Publisher
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020 |a 1363755X (ISSN) 
245 1 0 |a Everyday music in infancy 
260 0 |b John Wiley and Sons Inc  |c 2021 
856 |z View Fulltext in Publisher  |u https://doi.org/10.1111/desc.13122 
520 3 |a Infants enculturate to their soundscape over the first year of life, yet theories of how they do so rarely make contact with details about the sounds available in everyday life. Here, we report on properties of a ubiquitous early ecology in which foundational skills get built: music. We captured daylong recordings from 35 infants ages 6–12 months at home and fully double-coded 467 h of everyday sounds for music and its features, tunes, and voices. Analyses of this first-of-its-kind corpus revealed two distributional properties of infants’ everyday musical ecology. First, infants encountered vocal music in over half, and instrumental in over three-quarters, of everyday music. Live sources generated one-third, and recorded sources three-quarters, of everyday music. Second, infants did not encounter each individual tune and voice in their day equally often. Instead, the most available identity cumulated to many more seconds of the day than would be expected under a uniform distribution. These properties of everyday music in human infancy are different from what is discoverable in environments highly constrained by context (e.g., laboratories) and time (e.g., minutes rather than hours). Together with recent insights about the everyday motor, language, and visual ecologies of infancy, these findings reinforce an emerging priority to build theories of development that address the opportunities and challenges of real input encountered by real learners. © 2021 The Authors. Developmental Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd 
650 0 4 |a Auditory Perception 
650 0 4 |a enculturation 
650 0 4 |a everyday ecologies 
650 0 4 |a hearing 
650 0 4 |a human 
650 0 4 |a Humans 
650 0 4 |a infancy 
650 0 4 |a infant 
650 0 4 |a Infant 
650 0 4 |a input 
650 0 4 |a language 
650 0 4 |a Language 
650 0 4 |a LENA 
650 0 4 |a music 
650 0 4 |a music 
650 0 4 |a Music 
650 0 4 |a sound 
650 0 4 |a Sound 
650 0 4 |a voice 
650 0 4 |a Voice 
700 1 |a Fausey, C.M.  |e author 
700 1 |a Mendoza, J.K.  |e author 
773 |t Developmental Science