We examined the puzzling research findings that when extending novel nouns, preschoolers rely on shape similarity (rather than categorical relations) while in other task contexts (e.g., property induction) they rely on categorical relations. Taking into account research on children’s word learning, categorization, and inductive inference we assume that preschoolers have both a shape-based and a category-based word extension strategy available and can switch between these two depending on which information is easily available. To this end, we tested preschoolers on two versions of a novel-noun label extension task. First, we paralleled the standard extension task commonly used by previous research. In this case, as expected, preschoolers pre...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Two experiments examined 3- and 4-year-old children’s ability to map novel adjectives to object prop...
Children show considerable individual differences in their early vocabularies. While these differenc...
We examined the puzzling research findings that when extending novel nouns, preschoolers rely on sha...
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...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
This paper reports evidence from a longitudinal study in which children’s attention to shape in a la...
This paper reports evidence from a longitudinal study in which children's attention to shape in...
suggests that preschool children approach the task of word leaming equipped with implicit biases tha...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Two experiments examined the role of perceptual complexity, object familiarity and form class cues o...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Children initially learn the meanings of words by attending to the events and entities that accompan...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Two experiments examined 3- and 4-year-old children’s ability to map novel adjectives to object prop...
Children show considerable individual differences in their early vocabularies. While these differenc...
We examined the puzzling research findings that when extending novel nouns, preschoolers rely on sha...
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...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
Children's early noun vocabularies are dominated by names for shape-based categories. However, along...
This paper reports evidence from a longitudinal study in which children’s attention to shape in a la...
This paper reports evidence from a longitudinal study in which children's attention to shape in...
suggests that preschool children approach the task of word leaming equipped with implicit biases tha...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Two experiments examined the role of perceptual complexity, object familiarity and form class cues o...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Children initially learn the meanings of words by attending to the events and entities that accompan...
There is an ongoing debate over the extent to which language development shares common processing me...
Two experiments examined 3- and 4-year-old children’s ability to map novel adjectives to object prop...
Children show considerable individual differences in their early vocabularies. While these differenc...