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Amanda Rose Yuile; Justin B. Kueser; Claney Outzen; Sharon Christ; Risa Stiegler; MaryCarson Adams; Barbara Brown; Arielle Borovsky – Developmental Science, 2026
Toddlers better retain novel object-label mappings from taxonomic categories they have more knowledge of. Separately, words for concepts with more perceptual features are learned earlier than words for concepts with fewer perceptual features. Because these factors have only been examined separately, it is unclear whether the effects of taxonomic…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Vocabulary Development, Taxonomy, Concept Formation
Amaia Carrión-Castillo; Manuel Carreiras; Marie Lallier – Developmental Science, 2026
Genetic factors are known to play a role in shaping reading abilities and their underlying cognitive processes. However, understanding how genetic and environmental factors interact to influence reading outcomes remains largely unknown. By evaluating the interplay between genetic and environmental influences on reading performance, this study aims…
Descriptors: Genetics, Environmental Influences, Reading Processes, Reading Achievement
Marina Bazhydai; Malcolm K. Y. Wong; Elena Constanze Altmann; Samuel David Jones; Gert Westermann – Developmental Science, 2026
The cognitive mechanisms and benefits of active learning in early child development are poorly understood. The current study investigated 20-23-month-old infants' curiosity-driven information selection in a novel word learning task, designed to identify any potential advantage for active learning over passive learning. In a gaze-contingent…
Descriptors: Infants, Vocabulary Development, Cognitive Processes, Personality Traits
Mira L. Nencheva; Hannah Van Dusen; Erin Watson; Casey Lew-Williams – Developmental Science, 2026
Emotion and language are very common in young children's everyday lives. Hour by hour, they play, listen, vocalize, react, and emote. Despite the centrality of emotion and language to toddlers' local environments, the dynamic interplay of these communicative signals is practically unexplored. Here, we investigated how fluctuations in caregiver and…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Vocabulary Development, Psychological Patterns, Interpersonal Communication
Sarah C. Kucker; Rachel F. Barr; Lynn K. Perry – Developmental Science, 2026
The last decade has seen an exponential rise in children's digital media use, as well as growing evidence that it is associated with changes in children's vocabulary. However, while high rates of low-quality digital media have been associated with lower "amounts" of words a child says, little work has examined whether digital media…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development
Haley Weaver; Jenny R. Saffran – Developmental Science, 2026
Questions about early word knowledge pervade the literature on both typical and atypical language trajectories. To determine which words an infant knows, researchers have relied on two types of measures--caregiver-report and eye-gaze behavior. When these measures are compared, however, their results frequently fail to converge, making it difficult…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Infants
Joshua LaFleur – Reading Teacher, 2026
Connecting explicit vocabulary study to movement, talk, and shared decision-making offers a potent yet often untapped route to deeper reading comprehension in the middle elementary years. This article describes a concise routine--semantic gradients enacted by visibly random triads on vertical non-permanent surfaces--that fuses embodied learning…
Descriptors: Literacy, Semantics, Content Area Reading, Word Study Skills
Ethan Kutlu; Hyoju Kim; Bob McMurray – Developmental Science, 2026
A critical aspect of spoken language development is learning to categorize the sounds of the child's language(s). This process was thought to develop early during infancy to set the stage for the later development of higher-level aspects of language (e.g., vocabulary, syntax). However, many recent studies have shown that speech categorization…
Descriptors: Oral Language, Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Child Language
Joan Sedita – Brookes Publishing Company, 2026
The science of reading isn't just for younger learners--all middle and high school students, particularly those who struggle with foundational skills, benefit from literacy instruction. This groundbreaking book for Grades 5-12 is a practical guide for teaching reading and writing skills across all subject areas. Developed by Joan Sedita, the…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction, Adolescents, Reading Skills

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