The purpose of this study was to assess the perceptual role of brief synthetic consonant-vowel syllables as cues for vowel perception in children and adults. Nine types of consonant-vowel syllables comprised of the stops [b d g] followed by the vowels [i a u] were synthesized. Stimuli were generated with durations of 10, 30, or 46 ms, and with or without formant transition motion. Eight children at each of five age levels (5, 6, 7, 9, and 11 years) and a control group of eight adults were trained to identify each vowel in a three-alternative forced-choice (3AFC) paradigm. The results showed that children and adults extracted vowel information at a generally high level from stimuli as brief as 10 ms. For many stimuli, there was little or no difference between the performance of children and adults. However, developmental effects were observed. First, the accuracy of vowel perception was more influenced by the consonant context for children than for adults. Whereas perception was similar across age levels for stimuli in the alveolar context, the youngest children perceived vowels in the labial and velar contexts at significantly lower levels than adults. Second, children were more affected by variations in stimulus duration than were adults. This finding was particularly prominent for the syllable [ga], where the dependency on duration decreased with age in a nearly linear fashion. These findings are discussed in relation to current hypotheses of vowel perception in adults, and hypotheses of speech perception development.