Why do children learn nouns such as cup faster than dimensional adjectives such as big? Most explanations of this phenomenon rely on prior knowledge of the noun-adjective distinction or on the logical priority of nouns as the arguments of predicates. In this paper we examine an alternative account, one which relies instead on properties of the semantic categories to be learned and of the word learning task itself. We isolate four such properties: the relative size, the relative compactness, and the degree of overlap of the regions in representational space associated with the categories and the presence or absence of lexical dimensions (what color? ) in the linguistic context of a word. In a set of five experiments, we trained a simple conn...
The words that children learn can be characterized as a semantic network, with links connecting rela...
My research investigates why nouns are learned\ud disproportionately more frequently than other kind...
International audienceChildren tend to produce words earlier when they are connected to a variety of...
Why do children learn nouns such as cup faster than dimensional adjectives such as big? Most explana...
Why do children learn nouns such as cup faster than dimensional adjectives such as big? Most explana...
Previous studies have documented that children are slow to acquire adjectives into their productive ...
Across the world's languages, children reliably learn nouns more easily than verbs. Attempts to unde...
Word learning implies learning of both a phonological form and its referent. For nouns, the referent...
Much of children's early language is grammatical. This fact has been used as a support for the ...
The shared features that characterize the noun categories that young children learn first are a form...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
Young children, with no prior knowledge, learn word meanings from a highly noisy and ambiguous input...
Abstract only availableA huge proportion of children's early vocabularies consists of nouns. Researc...
This paper examines children's early noun vocabularies and their interpretations of names for s...
This research tested the hypothesis that young children’s bias to generalize names for solid objects...
The words that children learn can be characterized as a semantic network, with links connecting rela...
My research investigates why nouns are learned\ud disproportionately more frequently than other kind...
International audienceChildren tend to produce words earlier when they are connected to a variety of...
Why do children learn nouns such as cup faster than dimensional adjectives such as big? Most explana...
Why do children learn nouns such as cup faster than dimensional adjectives such as big? Most explana...
Previous studies have documented that children are slow to acquire adjectives into their productive ...
Across the world's languages, children reliably learn nouns more easily than verbs. Attempts to unde...
Word learning implies learning of both a phonological form and its referent. For nouns, the referent...
Much of children's early language is grammatical. This fact has been used as a support for the ...
The shared features that characterize the noun categories that young children learn first are a form...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
Young children, with no prior knowledge, learn word meanings from a highly noisy and ambiguous input...
Abstract only availableA huge proportion of children's early vocabularies consists of nouns. Researc...
This paper examines children's early noun vocabularies and their interpretations of names for s...
This research tested the hypothesis that young children’s bias to generalize names for solid objects...
The words that children learn can be characterized as a semantic network, with links connecting rela...
My research investigates why nouns are learned\ud disproportionately more frequently than other kind...
International audienceChildren tend to produce words earlier when they are connected to a variety of...