In ambiguous word learning situations, infants can use systematic strategies to determine the referent of a novel word. One such heuristic is disambiguation. By age 16-18 months, monolinguals infer that a novel noun refers to a novel object rather than a familiar one (Halberda, 2003), while at the same age bilinguals and trilinguals do not reliably show disambiguation (Byers-Heinlein & Werker, 2009; Houston‐Price, Caloghiris, & Raviglione, 2010). It has been hypothesized that these results reflect a unique aspect of the bilingual lexicon: bilinguals often know many translation equivalents, cross‐language synonyms such as English dog and Mandarin gǒu. We studied the role of vocabulary knowledge in the development of disambiguation by rel...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Disambiguation refers to children's tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
In order to find the referents of words, infants rely on constrains that guide their interpretations...
In ambiguous word learning situations, infants can use systematic strategies to determine the refere...
To rise to the challenge of acquiring their native language, infants must deploy tools to support th...
To rise to the challenge of acquiring their native language, infants must deploy tools to support th...
Although linguistic and nonlinguistic cues help young children infer meaning when presented with unf...
Previous studies in the field of lexical acquisition in simultaneous bilinguals have found that the...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Fourteen-month-old infants raised in a monolingual English environment confuse phonetically similar...
Fourteen-month-old infants raised in a monolingual English environment confuse phonetically similar...
Aims and Objectives: Mutual exclusivity refers to children's assumption that there are one-to-one co...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Disambiguation refers to children’s tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Disambiguation refers to children's tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
In order to find the referents of words, infants rely on constrains that guide their interpretations...
In ambiguous word learning situations, infants can use systematic strategies to determine the refere...
To rise to the challenge of acquiring their native language, infants must deploy tools to support th...
To rise to the challenge of acquiring their native language, infants must deploy tools to support th...
Although linguistic and nonlinguistic cues help young children infer meaning when presented with unf...
Previous studies in the field of lexical acquisition in simultaneous bilinguals have found that the...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Fourteen-month-old infants raised in a monolingual English environment confuse phonetically similar...
Fourteen-month-old infants raised in a monolingual English environment confuse phonetically similar...
Aims and Objectives: Mutual exclusivity refers to children's assumption that there are one-to-one co...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Disambiguation refers to children’s tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
This study tests the widely-cited claim from Volterra & Taeschner (1978), which is reinforced by Cla...
Disambiguation refers to children's tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
In order to find the referents of words, infants rely on constrains that guide their interpretations...