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Emily Mather; Shane Lindsay – Infant and Child Development, 2025
There is widespread evidence that children display a mutual exclusivity response upon encountering new words. Children displaying this behaviour will select a novel, name-unknown object in response to a novel label, rather than a familiar, name-known object. The mutual exclusivity response has been viewed as a means of fast-mapping…
Descriptors: Children, Memory, Retention (Psychology), Vocabulary Development
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Murakami, Taro; Hashiya, Kazuhide – Infant and Child Development, 2019
In verbal communication, a receiver often needs to resolve referential ambiguity. This study set two experimental conditions to separate the possibility of local correspondence based on the persisting strategy of reference assignment from that of more flexible reference skills. A total of 139 three-year-old and five-year-old children engaged in…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Pragmatics, Ambiguity (Semantics), Comparative Analysis
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Perry, Lynn K.; Axelsson, Emma L.; Horst, Jessica S. – Infant and Child Development, 2016
Although young children can map a novel name to a novel object, it remains unclear what they actually remember about objects when they initially make such a name-object association. In the current study we investigated (1) what children remembered after they were initially introduced to name-object associations and (2) how their vocabulary size…
Descriptors: Memory, Vocabulary Development, Prediction, Cognitive Mapping
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Tunteler, Erika; Resing, Wilma C. M. – Infant and Child Development, 2007
This study assessed the development of spontaneous analogical transfer from story problems to physical tasks by examining the effects of practice alone, without intervention or explicit prompting. Participants were 216 children aged 5-8 years. The microgenetic technique was incorporated with each age group by following them for six consecutive…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Young Children, Age Differences, Child Development