ABSTRACT. The authors ' purpose in this study was to evaluate the role of attention, as a central dimension of temperament, in children's real-time acquisition of novel vocabu-lary. Environmental distractions were administered to 47 22-month-old children as they acquired novel vocabulary in a fast-mapping task. Two distraction conditions impeded novel word acquisition, but only I impeded attention allocation. Attention allocation was correlated with novel word acquisition under conditions of distraction, but not in their absence. Results suggest that attention allocation is especially important for word learn-ing under conditions of distraction. Given that in their day-to-day lives children often encounter new words amid a host of...
To examine how young children learn to read new words, we asked preschoolers (N = 115, mean age 4 ye...
An increasing number of researchers have begun to identify relationships between dimensions of infan...
This study investigated the contribution of naming speed and phonemic awareness to teacher inattenti...
Researchers have been reporting temperament-language correlations in infants for 10 years. However, ...
The word- and nonword-learning abilities of toddlers were tested under various conditions of environ...
This paper investigates the role of general attention-shifting mechanisms in children’s early adject...
Researchers have demonstrated a persistent relationship between joint attention (JA) and language ab...
The current study tests the hypothesis that shy children's reduced word learning is partly due to an...
Incidental acquisition of vocabulary knowledge during everyday reading has received attention by res...
It is becoming increasingly clear that infants’ and toddlers’ temperament may play a central role in...
Literacy skills have been linked to temporal shifts of attention. We set out to examine the paramete...
From mid-childhood onwards, children learn hundreds of new words every year incidentally through rea...
Learning depends on attention. The processes that cue attention in the moment dynamically inte-grate...
Known words can guide visual attention, affecting how information is sampled. How do novel words, th...
An interesting paradox in the developmental literature has emerged in which fast-habituating babies ...
To examine how young children learn to read new words, we asked preschoolers (N = 115, mean age 4 ye...
An increasing number of researchers have begun to identify relationships between dimensions of infan...
This study investigated the contribution of naming speed and phonemic awareness to teacher inattenti...
Researchers have been reporting temperament-language correlations in infants for 10 years. However, ...
The word- and nonword-learning abilities of toddlers were tested under various conditions of environ...
This paper investigates the role of general attention-shifting mechanisms in children’s early adject...
Researchers have demonstrated a persistent relationship between joint attention (JA) and language ab...
The current study tests the hypothesis that shy children's reduced word learning is partly due to an...
Incidental acquisition of vocabulary knowledge during everyday reading has received attention by res...
It is becoming increasingly clear that infants’ and toddlers’ temperament may play a central role in...
Literacy skills have been linked to temporal shifts of attention. We set out to examine the paramete...
From mid-childhood onwards, children learn hundreds of new words every year incidentally through rea...
Learning depends on attention. The processes that cue attention in the moment dynamically inte-grate...
Known words can guide visual attention, affecting how information is sampled. How do novel words, th...
An interesting paradox in the developmental literature has emerged in which fast-habituating babies ...
To examine how young children learn to read new words, we asked preschoolers (N = 115, mean age 4 ye...
An increasing number of researchers have begun to identify relationships between dimensions of infan...
This study investigated the contribution of naming speed and phonemic awareness to teacher inattenti...