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Ferhat Karaman; Jill Lany; Jessica F. Hay – Cognitive Science, 2024
Infants are sensitive to statistics in spoken language that aid word-form segmentation and immediate mapping to referents. However, it is not clear whether this sensitivity influences the formation and retention of word-referent mappings across a delay, two real-world challenges that learners must overcome. We tested how the timing of referent…
Descriptors: Infants, Language, Language Skill Attrition, Word Recognition
Masoud Jasbi; Akshay Jaggi; Eve V. Clark; Michael C. Frank – Journal of Child Language, 2024
What are the constraints, cues, and mechanisms that help learners create successful word-meaning mappings? This study takes up linguistic disjunction and looks at cues and mechanisms that can help children learn the meaning of "or." We first used a large corpus of parent-child interactions to collect statistics on "or" uses.…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Cues, Semantics, Young Children
Thora Másdóttir; Barbara May Bernhardt; Joseph Paul Stemberger; Gunnar Ólafur Hansson – Journal of Child Language, 2024
The feature [+spread glottis] ([+s.g.]) denotes that a speech sound is produced with a wide glottal aperture with audible voiceless airflow. Icelandic is unusual in the degree to which [+spread glottis] is involved in the phonology: in /h/, pre-aspirated and post-aspirated stops, voiceless fricatives and voiceless sonorants. The ubiquitousness of…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Speech, Young Children, Phonology
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
Juliana Ronderos; Anny Castilla-Earls; Arturo E. Hernandez; Lisa Fitton – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: This study investigated the dimensionality of language in bilingual children using measures of semantics and morphosyntax in English and Spanish. Method: Participants included 112 Spanish-English bilingual children ages 4-8 years from a wide range of language abilities and dominance profiles. Using measures of semantics and morphosyntax…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Spanish, English, Semantics
Crossing the Boundary: No Catastrophic Limits on Infants' Capacity to Represent Linguistic Sequences
Natalia Reoyo-Serrano; Anastasia Dimakou; Chiara Nascimben; Tamara Bastianello; Daniela Lucangeli; Silvia Benavides-Varela – Developmental Science, 2025
The boundary effect, namely the infants' failures to compare small and large numerosities, is well documented in studies using visual stimuli. The prevailing explanation is that the numerical system used to process sets up to 3 is incompatible with the system employed for numbers >3. This study investigates the boundary effect in 10-month-old…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Speech Communication, Language Processing
Guro S. Sjuls – Infant and Child Development, 2025
Studying early language development has been a challenging task throughout the years. Earlier studies mostly documented language competence only after toddlers had started producing their first words. Theoretical and methodological advances in this domain brought about more sophisticated ways of probing into early development by exploiting overt…
Descriptors: Language Research, Language Acquisition, Toddlers, Infants
Nick Riches – Journal of Child Language, 2025
Children's early grammatical constructions, e.g., SVO, exhibit a learning curve with cumulative verb types (CVT) increasing exponentially. According to Ninio (2006), the fact that learning curves, though nonlinear, can be modelled by a continuous regression suggests instant generalisation. Moreover, differences in initial verbs across children…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Spanish, Syntax
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
Chi-hsin Chen; Yayun Zhang; Chen Yu – Cognitive Science, 2025
Learning the meaning of a verb is challenging because learners need to resolve two types of ambiguity: (1) word-referent mapping--finding the correct referent event of a verb, and (2) word-meaning mapping--inferring the correct meaning of the verb from the referent event (e.g., whether the meaning of an action word is TURNING or TWISTING). The…
Descriptors: Verbs, Ambiguity (Semantics), Adult Students, Linguistic Input
Lucie Wolters; Simon Kirby; Inbal Arnon – Cognitive Science, 2025
Language is passed across generations through cultural transmission. Prior experimental work, where participants reproduced sets of non-linguistic sequences in transmission chains, shows that this process gives rise to two characteristic statistical properties of language that enhance its learnability: the statistical coherence of words and the…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Cultural Influences, Word Frequency, Learning Processes
Cheung, Pierina; Ansari, Daniel – Developmental Science, 2023
Very large numbers words such as "hundred," "thousand," "million," "billion," and "trillion" pose a learning problem for children because they are sparse in everyday speech and children's experience with extremely large quantities is scarce. In this study, we examine when children acquire the…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Vocabulary Development, Numeracy, Young Children
Maureen de Seyssel; Marvin Lavechin; Emmanuel Dupoux – Journal of Child Language, 2023
There is a current 'theory crisis' in language acquisition research, resulting from fragmentation both at the level of the approaches and the linguistic level studied. We identify a need for integrative approaches that go beyond these limitations, and propose to analyse the strengths and weaknesses of current theoretical approaches of language…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Language Research, Simulation, Linguistic Input
Yang Wang – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Reduplication, the copying operation employed in natural language morphophonology (e.g., Ilokano pluralization, [kaldin] 'goat'; [kal-kaldin] 'goats'; Hayes and Abad, 1989, p. 357), creates repetition structures within surface word forms. Though reduplication and surface repetitions have been extensively studied, two questions remain unresolved.…
Descriptors: Morphophonemics, Suprasegmentals, Language Patterns, Language Acquisition
Lynn K. Perry; Daniel S. Messinger; Ivette Cejas – Developmental Science, 2025
Although vocabulary size is thought to index children's language abilities, an increasing body of work suggests that regularities in children's vocabulary composition, particularly the proportion of shape-based nouns (e.g., cup), support language development. Here we examine initial vocabulary composition in children with hearing loss following…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Language Acquisition, Children, Assistive Technology

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