Mainstream research in Linguistics claims that grammatical regularities are scarcely represented in the linguistic input to which children are exposed. However, recent empirical research shows that child-directed speech contains a series of reliable cues that might assist young language learners in language development. The present study aims at testing whether English child-directed speech contains morphosyntactic regularities which might be robust enough for infants to group nouns in their grammatical category. The results from the study show that, in fact, the kind of input available to English-learning infants contains reliable and consistent distributional cues to account for most of the nouns to which children are exposed
Adjectives are essential for describing and differentiating concepts. However, they have a protracte...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Nouns used by young English-speaking children were more reliably the names of things and their verbs...
During the process of language development, one of the most important tasks that children must face ...
How does a child map words to grammatical categories when words are not overtly marked either lexica...
One of the most important tasks in first language development is assigning words to their grammatic...
Given the selectional restrictions on the kinds of subjects and objects that a verb may take, it see...
Infants' ability to learn new words, particularly nouns, increases dramatically in the months follo...
Infants' ability to learn new words, particularly nouns, increases dramatically in the months follo...
Abstract only availableWhen children begin to learn vocabulary, they tend to learn more nouns than v...
The current study examines whether a difference exists in the emergence of nouns and verbs in childr...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Examining the `Noun Bias': A Structural Approach The current study examines whether a differenc...
a b s t r a c t Numerous distributional cues in the child's environment may potentially assist ...
Numerous distributional cues in the child's environment may potentially assist in language learning,...
Adjectives are essential for describing and differentiating concepts. However, they have a protracte...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Nouns used by young English-speaking children were more reliably the names of things and their verbs...
During the process of language development, one of the most important tasks that children must face ...
How does a child map words to grammatical categories when words are not overtly marked either lexica...
One of the most important tasks in first language development is assigning words to their grammatic...
Given the selectional restrictions on the kinds of subjects and objects that a verb may take, it see...
Infants' ability to learn new words, particularly nouns, increases dramatically in the months follo...
Infants' ability to learn new words, particularly nouns, increases dramatically in the months follo...
Abstract only availableWhen children begin to learn vocabulary, they tend to learn more nouns than v...
The current study examines whether a difference exists in the emergence of nouns and verbs in childr...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Examining the `Noun Bias': A Structural Approach The current study examines whether a differenc...
a b s t r a c t Numerous distributional cues in the child's environment may potentially assist ...
Numerous distributional cues in the child's environment may potentially assist in language learning,...
Adjectives are essential for describing and differentiating concepts. However, they have a protracte...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Nouns used by young English-speaking children were more reliably the names of things and their verbs...