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Knabe, Melina L.; Vlach, Haley A. – Developmental Science, 2023
Word learning studies traditionally examine the narrow link between words and objects, indifferent to the rich contextual information surrounding objects. This research examined whether children attend to this contextual information and construct an associative matrix of the words, objects, people, and environmental context during word learning.…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Child Language, Vocabulary Development, Associative Learning
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Felix Hao Wang; Meili Luo; Nan Li – Developmental Science, 2024
In word learning, learners need to identify the referent of words by leveraging the fact that the same word may co-occur with different sets of objects. This raises the question, what do children remember from "in the moment" that they can use for cross-situational learning? Furthermore, do children represent pictures of familiar animals…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Vocabulary Development, Memory, Language Acquisition
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Diellza Berani; Marie-Christine Franken; Lottie Stipdonk – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: To understand factors contributing to therapy success, this study investigated the role of parents' temperament and the fit between parents' temperament and parent-reported child behavior problems in therapy outcomes across two therapy types. Method: A total of 177 children who stutter and their parents were included in this study. Data…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Personality Traits, Stuttering, Preschool Children
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Creel, Sarah C. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2022
Purpose: The primary aim was to assess whether children have difficulty distinguishing similar-sounding novel words. The secondary aim was to assess what task characteristics might hinder or facilitate perceptual discrimination. Method: Three within-subjects experiments tested ninety-nine 3- to 5-year-old children total. Experiment 1 presented two…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Auditory Discrimination, Accuracy
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Kragness, Haley E.; Ullah, Farhat; Chan, Emma; Moses, Rachel; Cirelli, Laura K. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Around the world, musical engagement frequently involves movement. Most adults easily clap or sway to a wide range of tempos, even without formal musical training. The link between movement and music emerges early--young infants move more rhythmically to music than speech, but do not reliably align their movements to the beat. Laboratory work…
Descriptors: Music Activities, Familiarity, Motion, Dance
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Aussems, Suzanne; Kita, Sotaro – Child Development, 2021
This study investigated whether seeing iconic gestures depicting verb referents promotes two types of generalization. We taught 3- to 4-year-olds novel locomotion verbs. Children who saw iconic manner gestures during training generalized more verbs to novel events ("first-order generalization") than children who saw interactive gestures…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Verbs, Generalization, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Leonard, Laurence B.; Kueser, Justin B.; Deevy, Patricia; Haebig, Eileen; Karpicke, Jeffrey D.; Weber, Christine – Autism & Developmental Language Impairments, 2022
Background and Aims: Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) benefit from word learning procedures that include a mix of immediate retrieval and spaced retrieval trials. In this study, we examine the relative contribution of these two types of retrieval. Methods: We examine data from Haebig et al. (2019) in their study that compared an…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Language Impairments, Developmental Delays, Vocabulary Development
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Lubomirska, Anna; Eldevik, Sigmund; Eikeseth, Svein; Budzinska, Anna – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2022
Deficits in social referencing have been associated with autism spectrum disorder. It may lead to deficits in language, symbolic abilities, and other social-cognitive behaviors. When deficits in social referencing are detected, teaching such behaviors should be a priority, but effective teaching procedures are lacking. We consider social…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Preschool Children, Child Behavior, Social Development
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Yasamin Motamedi; Margherita Murgiano; Beata Grzyb; Yan Gu; Viktor Kewenig; Ricarda Brieke; Ed Donnellan; Chloe Marshall; Elizabeth Wonnacott; Pamela Perniss; Gabriella Vigliocco – Child Development, 2024
Most language use is displaced, referring to past, future, or hypothetical events, posing the challenge of how children learn what words refer to when the referent is not physically available. One possibility is that iconic cues that imagistically evoke properties of absent referents support learning when referents are displaced. In an…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Child Development, Cues, Parent Child Relationship
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Sia, Ming Yean; Mayor, Julien – Journal of Child Language, 2021
Children learn words in ambiguous situations, where multiple objects can potentially be referents for a new word. Yet, researchers debate whether children maintain a single word-object hypothesis -- and revise it if falsified by later information -- or whether children establish a network of word-object associations whose relative strengths are…
Descriptors: Children, Vocabulary Development, Ambiguity (Context), Learning Processes
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Snape, Simon; Krott, Andrea – Journal of Child Language, 2022
Young children struggle more with mapping novel words onto relational referents (e.g., verbs) compared to non-relational referents (e.g., nouns). We present further evidence for this notion by investigating children's extensions of noun-noun compounds, which map onto combinations of non-relational referents, i.e., objects (e.g., "baby"…
Descriptors: Verbs, Nouns, Cognitive Mapping, Child Language
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Yara Aljahlan; Tammie J. Spaulding – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2023
Purpose: This study investigated the attentional tendencies of preschool children with developmental language disorder (DLD) and their typical language (TL) peers during a word learning task to examine what visual properties of novel objects capture their attention. Method: Twelve children with DLD and 12 children with TL completed a novel name…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Developmental Disabilities, Language Impairments, Neurodevelopmental Disorders
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Richtsmeier, Peter T.; Moore, Michelle W. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: Perceptual learning and production practice are basic mechanisms that children depend on to acquire adult levels of speech accuracy. In this study, we examined perceptual learning and production practice as they contributed to changes in speech accuracy in 3- and 4-year-old children. Our primary focus was manipulating the order of…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Speech, Accuracy
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Avivi-Reich, Meital; Roberts, Megan Y.; Grieco-Calub, Tina M. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: This study tested the effects of background speech babble on novel word learning in preschool children with a multisession paradigm. Method: Eight 3-year-old children were exposed to a total of 8 novel word-object pairs across 2 story books presented digitally. Each story contained 4 novel consonant-vowel-consonant nonwords. Children were…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Language Acquisition, Speech
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Bleijlevens, Natalie; Contier, Friederike; Behne, Tanya – Developmental Science, 2023
How do children succeed in learning a word? Research has shown robustly that, in ambiguous labeling situations, young children assume novel labels to refer to unfamiliar rather than familiar objects. However, ongoing debates center on the underlying mechanism: Is this behavior based on lexical constraints, guided by pragmatic reasoning, or simply…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Thinking Skills, Vocabulary Development, Ambiguity (Semantics)
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