Four experiments explored the processes that bridge between referent selection and word learning. Twenty-four-month-old infants were presented with several novel names during a referent selection task that included both familiar and novel objects and tested for retention after a 5-min delay. The 5-min delay ensured that word learning was based on retrieval from long-term memory. Moreover, the relative familiarity of objects used during the retention test was explicitly controlled. Across experiments, infants were excellent at referent selection, but very poor at retention. Although the highly controlled retention test was clearly challenging, infants were able to demonstrate retention of the first 4 novel names presented in the session when...
Upon fast mapping, children rarely retain new words even over intervals as short as 5 min. In this s...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
In everyday word learning words are only sometimes heard in the presence of their referent, making t...
Previous research suggests that competition among the objects present during referent selection infl...
a b s t r a c t Learning a new word consists of two primary tasks that have often been conflated int...
Young children are surprisingly good word learners. Despite their relative lack of world knowledge a...
Children's remarkable ability to map linguistic labels to referents in the world is commonly called ...
In order to successfully acquire a new word, young children must learn the correct associations betw...
Children can learn aspects of the meaning of a new word on the basis of only a few incidental exposu...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorization. In the current study, we inve...
We compared short- and long-term retention of fast mapped color, shape and texture words as well as ...
The current study examines how focusing children’s attention immediately after fast mapping improves...
There has been general consensus that initial word learning during early infancy is a slow and time-...
It was suggested that children's referent selection may not lay memory traces sufficiently strong to...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
Upon fast mapping, children rarely retain new words even over intervals as short as 5 min. In this s...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
In everyday word learning words are only sometimes heard in the presence of their referent, making t...
Previous research suggests that competition among the objects present during referent selection infl...
a b s t r a c t Learning a new word consists of two primary tasks that have often been conflated int...
Young children are surprisingly good word learners. Despite their relative lack of world knowledge a...
Children's remarkable ability to map linguistic labels to referents in the world is commonly called ...
In order to successfully acquire a new word, young children must learn the correct associations betw...
Children can learn aspects of the meaning of a new word on the basis of only a few incidental exposu...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorization. In the current study, we inve...
We compared short- and long-term retention of fast mapped color, shape and texture words as well as ...
The current study examines how focusing children’s attention immediately after fast mapping improves...
There has been general consensus that initial word learning during early infancy is a slow and time-...
It was suggested that children's referent selection may not lay memory traces sufficiently strong to...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
Upon fast mapping, children rarely retain new words even over intervals as short as 5 min. In this s...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
In everyday word learning words are only sometimes heard in the presence of their referent, making t...