Usage-based approaches to language acquisition argue that children acquire the grammar of their target language using general-cognitive learning principles. The current paper reports on an experiment that tested a central assumption of the usage-based approach: argument structure patterns are connected to high frequency verbs that facilitate acquisition. Sixty children (N = 60) aged 4- and 6-years participated in a sentence recall/lexical priming experiment that manipulated the frequency with which the target verbs occurred in the finite sentential complement construction in English. The results showed that the children performed better on sentences that contained high frequency verbs. Furthermore, the children's performance suggested that ...
Our target paper argued for the ubiquity of frequency effects in acquisition, and that any comprehen...
Using a computational model of verb argument structure learn-ing, we study a key assumption of the u...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
Usage-based approaches to language acquisition argue that children acquire the grammar of their targ...
We present empirical data showing that the relative frequency with which a verb normally appears in ...
Lexically based learning and semantic analogy may both play a role in the learning of grammar. To i...
This review article presents evidence for the claim that frequency effects are pervasive in children...
Lexically based learning and semantic analogy may both play a role in the learning of grammar. To in...
This paper presents an experiment that demonstrates syntactic priming in three- and four-year-old ch...
While usage-based approaches to language development enjoy considerable support from computational s...
Successful language acquisition requires both generalization and lexically based learning. Previous ...
This chapter provides a synoptic account of the usage-based approach to language acquisition, in bot...
In many cognitive domains, learning is more effective when exemplars are distributed over a number o...
Abstract To better understand the developmental trajectory of children's pragmatic development, s...
Successful language acquisition requires both generalization and lexically based learning. Previous ...
Our target paper argued for the ubiquity of frequency effects in acquisition, and that any comprehen...
Using a computational model of verb argument structure learn-ing, we study a key assumption of the u...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
Usage-based approaches to language acquisition argue that children acquire the grammar of their targ...
We present empirical data showing that the relative frequency with which a verb normally appears in ...
Lexically based learning and semantic analogy may both play a role in the learning of grammar. To i...
This review article presents evidence for the claim that frequency effects are pervasive in children...
Lexically based learning and semantic analogy may both play a role in the learning of grammar. To in...
This paper presents an experiment that demonstrates syntactic priming in three- and four-year-old ch...
While usage-based approaches to language development enjoy considerable support from computational s...
Successful language acquisition requires both generalization and lexically based learning. Previous ...
This chapter provides a synoptic account of the usage-based approach to language acquisition, in bot...
In many cognitive domains, learning is more effective when exemplars are distributed over a number o...
Abstract To better understand the developmental trajectory of children's pragmatic development, s...
Successful language acquisition requires both generalization and lexically based learning. Previous ...
Our target paper argued for the ubiquity of frequency effects in acquisition, and that any comprehen...
Using a computational model of verb argument structure learn-ing, we study a key assumption of the u...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...