Associative learning has been meticulously studied in many species, and diverse effects have been explained using a handful of basic assumptions and mechanisms. Human language acquisition proceeds remarkably quickly and is of great interest, but is arguably more difficult to capture under the microscope. Nonetheless, empirical investigations have led researchers to theorize a variety of language learning principles and constraints. While there may indeed be language-specific learning mechanisms that are distinct from more universal associative learning mechanisms, we seek to explain some basic principles of language acquisition using domain-general mechanisms. Using an experiment and a model, we show how the principles of mutual exclusivity...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/139792/1/pp400-ellis.pd
Word-learning likely involves a multiplicity of components, some domain-general, others domain-speci...
Poster Session 4: no. 189Implicit learning is generally characterised as a domain-general associativ...
Learners are able to infer the meanings of words by observ-ing the consistent statistical associatio...
© 2016 Cognitive Science Society, Inc. Across a series of four experiments with 3- to 4-year-olds we...
Children tend to look at name-unknownobjects when they hearnovel words, a behaviour that researchers...
An associative approach to lexical acquisition assumes that the principles of associative learning a...
Children who hear lots of language have larger vocabularies. The words within the language also affe...
Children improve at word learning during the 2nd year of life—sometimes dramatically. This fact has ...
2014-07-14How learners map words to meanings is a central question in language acquisition. Yu & Smi...
Word learning happens in everyday contexts with many words and many potential referents for those wo...
Young language learners are able to map a word onto its ref-erent from an infinite number of possibl...
We review recent artificial language learning studies, especially those following Endress and Bonatt...
Children can learn aspects of the meaning of a new word on the basis of only a few incidental exposu...
A critical question about the nature of human learning is whether it is an all-or-none or a gradual,...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/139792/1/pp400-ellis.pd
Word-learning likely involves a multiplicity of components, some domain-general, others domain-speci...
Poster Session 4: no. 189Implicit learning is generally characterised as a domain-general associativ...
Learners are able to infer the meanings of words by observ-ing the consistent statistical associatio...
© 2016 Cognitive Science Society, Inc. Across a series of four experiments with 3- to 4-year-olds we...
Children tend to look at name-unknownobjects when they hearnovel words, a behaviour that researchers...
An associative approach to lexical acquisition assumes that the principles of associative learning a...
Children who hear lots of language have larger vocabularies. The words within the language also affe...
Children improve at word learning during the 2nd year of life—sometimes dramatically. This fact has ...
2014-07-14How learners map words to meanings is a central question in language acquisition. Yu & Smi...
Word learning happens in everyday contexts with many words and many potential referents for those wo...
Young language learners are able to map a word onto its ref-erent from an infinite number of possibl...
We review recent artificial language learning studies, especially those following Endress and Bonatt...
Children can learn aspects of the meaning of a new word on the basis of only a few incidental exposu...
A critical question about the nature of human learning is whether it is an all-or-none or a gradual,...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/139792/1/pp400-ellis.pd
Word-learning likely involves a multiplicity of components, some domain-general, others domain-speci...
Poster Session 4: no. 189Implicit learning is generally characterised as a domain-general associativ...