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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
Zébulon Goriely; Andrew Caines; Paula Buttery – Journal of Child Language, 2025
We compare two frameworks for the segmentation of words in child-directed speech, PHOCUS and MULTICUE. PHOCUS is driven by lexical recognition, whereas MULTICUE combines sub-lexical properties to make boundary decisions, representing differing views of speech processing. We replicate these frameworks, perform novel benchmarking and confirm that…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Word Recognition
Luan Li; Ming Song; Qing Cai – Developmental Science, 2025
Early vocabulary development benefits from diverse lexical exposures within children's language environment. However, the influence of lexical diversity on children as they enter middle childhood and are exposed to multimodal language inputs remains unclear. This study evaluates global and local aspects of lexical diversity in three…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Lexicology, Child Language, Speech Communication
Judith Kalinowski; Laura Hansel; Michaela Vystrcilová; Alexander Ecker; Nivedita Mani – Cognitive Science, 2025
While much work has emphasized the role of the environment in language learning, research equally reports consistent effects of the child's knowledge, in particular, the words known to individual children, in steering further lexical development. Much of this work is based on cross-sectional data, assuming that the words typically known to…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Lexicology, Vocabulary Development
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
Nina Schoener; Sara C. Johnson; Sumarga H. Suanda – Cognitive Science, 2025
Both classic thought experiments and recent empirical evidence suggest that children frequently encounter new words whose meanings are underdetermined by the extralinguistic contexts in which they occur. The role that these referentially ambiguous events play in children's word learning is central to ongoing debates in the field. Do children learn…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Semantics, Ambiguity (Semantics), Metalinguistics
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
Zhou, Xin; Wang, Luchang; Hong, Xuancu; Wong, Patrick C. M. – Developmental Science, 2024
The speech register that adults especially caregivers use when interacting with infants and toddlers, that is, infant-directed speech (IDS) or baby talk, has been reported to facilitate language development throughout the early years. However, the neural mechanisms as well as why IDS results in such a developmental faciliatory effect remain to be…
Descriptors: Child Language, Infants, Interpersonal Communication, Vocabulary Development
Shin, Gyu-Ho; Mun, Seongmin – Developmental Science, 2023
This study investigates how neural networks address the properties of children's linguistic knowledge, with a focus on the "Agent-First" strategy in comprehension of an active transitive construction in Korean. We develop various neural-network models and measure their classification performance on the test stimuli used in a behavioural…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Language, Korean, Comprehension
Elena Luchkina; Fei Xu – Developmental Science, 2024
Previous research shows that infants of parents who are more likely to engage in socially contingent interactions with them tend to have larger vocabularies. An open question is "how" social contingency facilitates vocabulary growth. One possibility is that parents who speak in response to their infants more often produce larger…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Contingency Management, Parent Child Relationship, Child Language
Mengru Han; Nivja H. De Jong; René Kager – Journal of Child Language, 2024
This study examines correlations between the prosody of infant-directed speech (IDS) and children's vocabulary size. We collected longitudinal speech data and vocabulary information from Dutch mother-child dyads with children aged 18 (N = 49) and 24 (N = 27) months old. We took speech context into consideration and distinguished between prosody…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Language, Vocabulary Development, Suprasegmentals
Margaret Cychosz; Rachel R. Romeo; Jan R. Edwards; Rochelle S. Newman – Developmental Science, 2025
Children learn language by listening to speech from caregivers around them. However, the type and quantity of speech input that children are exposed to change throughout early childhood in ways that are poorly understood due to the small samples (few participants, limited hours of observation) typically available in developmental psychology. Here…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Young Children, Speech Communication
Seunghee Ha – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2024
Objectives: The study aimed to investigate the predictive potential of language environment and vocal development status measures obtained through integrated analysis of Language ENvironment Analysis (LENA) recordings during the prelinguistic stage for subsequent speech and language development in Korean-acquiring children. Specifically, this…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Korean, Vocabulary Development, Phonological Awareness
Kristen Syrett – Journal of Child Language, 2023
Like verbs, adjectives pose a challenge to the young word learner in that some -- like "red," "round," "rough," or "rectangular" -- map onto properties that are detectable through the senses, while others -- like "ready," "reasonable," or "required" -- express abstract…
Descriptors: Syntax, Form Classes (Languages), Language Acquisition, Child Language
Natalie Bleijlevens; Anna-Lena Ciesla; Tanya Behne – Developmental Science, 2025
Do mono- and bilingual children differ in the way they learn novel words in ambiguous settings? Listeners may resolve referential ambiguity by assuming that novel words refer to unknown, rather than known, objects--a response known as the "mutual exclusivity effect." Past research suggested that mono- and bilinguals differ with regard to…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, Bilingualism, Bilingual Students, Child Language

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