This study explores different frequency effects on children's interpretations of novel noun-noun compounds (e.g. egg bag as 'bag FOR eggs). We Investigated whether four- to five-year-olds and adults use their knowledge of related Compounds and their modifier-head relations (e.g. sandwich bag (FOR) or egg white (PART-OF)) when explaining the meaning of novel compounds and/or whether they are affected by overall frequency of modifier-head relations in their vocabulary. Children's interpretations were affected by their experience with relations in compounds with the same head, but not by overall relation frequency. Adults' interpretations were affected by their experience relations in compounds with the same modifier, Suggesting that children ...
We present empirical data showing that the relative frequency with which a verb normally appears in ...
Three-year-old children were shown a novel exemplar toy and asked to judge test items that dif-fered...
A widely studied morphological phenomenon in psycholinguistic research is the plurals-inside-compoun...
This study explores different frequency effects on children's interpretations of novel noun-noun com...
Abstract: Investigation into adult language users’ interpretation of ambiguous noun-noun compounds h...
The family size of the constituents of compound words, or the number of compounds sharing the consti...
The study of children\u27s use of invented words gives some insight into the forces motivating the a...
Children acquire different linguistic constructions in approximately the same order and near the sam...
The Competition Among Relation in Nominals theory (Gagné & Shoben, 1997) asserts that the relation f...
Abstract: When interpreting noun-noun combinations, such as dog scarf, one must distinguish a plausi...
Research in First Language Acquisition investigates three broad questions: What do children know abo...
Noun compounding is a productive word formation strategy in English. Low-frequency (hence: ‘novel’) ...
The Competition Among Relation in Nominals theory (Gagné & Shoben, 1997) asserts that the relation f...
Four experiments investigated the role of frequency information in compound production by independen...
Gagné and Shoben’s (J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 23:71–87, 1997) Competition Among Relations In Nomi...
We present empirical data showing that the relative frequency with which a verb normally appears in ...
Three-year-old children were shown a novel exemplar toy and asked to judge test items that dif-fered...
A widely studied morphological phenomenon in psycholinguistic research is the plurals-inside-compoun...
This study explores different frequency effects on children's interpretations of novel noun-noun com...
Abstract: Investigation into adult language users’ interpretation of ambiguous noun-noun compounds h...
The family size of the constituents of compound words, or the number of compounds sharing the consti...
The study of children\u27s use of invented words gives some insight into the forces motivating the a...
Children acquire different linguistic constructions in approximately the same order and near the sam...
The Competition Among Relation in Nominals theory (Gagné & Shoben, 1997) asserts that the relation f...
Abstract: When interpreting noun-noun combinations, such as dog scarf, one must distinguish a plausi...
Research in First Language Acquisition investigates three broad questions: What do children know abo...
Noun compounding is a productive word formation strategy in English. Low-frequency (hence: ‘novel’) ...
The Competition Among Relation in Nominals theory (Gagné & Shoben, 1997) asserts that the relation f...
Four experiments investigated the role of frequency information in compound production by independen...
Gagné and Shoben’s (J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 23:71–87, 1997) Competition Among Relations In Nomi...
We present empirical data showing that the relative frequency with which a verb normally appears in ...
Three-year-old children were shown a novel exemplar toy and asked to judge test items that dif-fered...
A widely studied morphological phenomenon in psycholinguistic research is the plurals-inside-compoun...