Young children learning English are biased to attend to the shape of solid rigid objects when learning novel names. This study seeks further understanding of the processes that support this behavior by examining a previous finding that three-year-old children are also biased to generalize novel names for objects made from deformable materials by shape, even after the materials are made salient. In two experiments, we examined the noun generalizations of 72 two-, three- and four-year- old children with rigid and deformable stimuli. Data reveal that three-year-old, but not two- or four-year-old, children generalize names for deformable things by shape, and that this behavior is not due to the syntactic context of the task. We suggest this beh...
Young typically developing (TD) children have been observed to utilize word learning strategies such...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
Two of the most formidable skills that characterize human beings are language and our prowess in vis...
Young children learning English are biased to attend to the shape of solid rigid objects when learni...
Young children learning English are biased to attend to the shape of solid rigid objects when learni...
Children use biases to learn novel words and extend these words to novel objects without having to g...
This paper reports evidence from a longitudinal study in which children's attention to shape in...
When children learn the name of a novel object, they tend to extend that name to other objects simil...
In the United States, children often generalize the meaning of new words by assuming that objects wi...
In this study, 3-year-olds matched on vocabulary score were taught three new shape terms by one of t...
This research tested the hypothesis that young children’s bias to generalize names for solid objects...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
This study explored the prevalence of the shape bias in children when faced with multiple perceptual...
There is debate about whether preschool-age children interpret words as referring to kinds or to cla...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
Young typically developing (TD) children have been observed to utilize word learning strategies such...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
Two of the most formidable skills that characterize human beings are language and our prowess in vis...
Young children learning English are biased to attend to the shape of solid rigid objects when learni...
Young children learning English are biased to attend to the shape of solid rigid objects when learni...
Children use biases to learn novel words and extend these words to novel objects without having to g...
This paper reports evidence from a longitudinal study in which children's attention to shape in...
When children learn the name of a novel object, they tend to extend that name to other objects simil...
In the United States, children often generalize the meaning of new words by assuming that objects wi...
In this study, 3-year-olds matched on vocabulary score were taught three new shape terms by one of t...
This research tested the hypothesis that young children’s bias to generalize names for solid objects...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
This study explored the prevalence of the shape bias in children when faced with multiple perceptual...
There is debate about whether preschool-age children interpret words as referring to kinds or to cla...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
Young typically developing (TD) children have been observed to utilize word learning strategies such...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
Two of the most formidable skills that characterize human beings are language and our prowess in vis...