The overall pattern of vocabulary development is relatively similar across children learning different languages. However, there are considerable differences in the words known to individual children. Historically, this variability has been explained in terms of differences in the input. Here, we examine the alternate possibility that children's individual interest in specific natural categories shapes the words they are likely to learn - a child who is more interested in animals will learn a new animal name easier relative to a new vehicle name. Two-year-old German-learning children (N = 39) were exposed to four novel word–object associations for objects from four different categories. Prior to the word learning task, we measured their int...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
When we think of children acquiring language, we often think of their acquisition of linguistic stru...
A large literature shows strong developmental links between early language abilities and later cogni...
Children show considerable individual differences in their early vocabularies. While these differenc...
<p>Does children’s curiosity for a particular category (e.g., animals, vehicles) impact their learni...
<div> <div> <div> <p>Methods </p> <p>In an ongoing study, we investigate the influence of category c...
By the end of their first year of life, children are typically able to produce a handful of words. O...
Previous literature shows that language input is related to the language that children produce. Less...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
Word learning implies learning of both a phonological form and its referent. For nouns, the referent...
Children tend to look at name-unknownobjects when they hearnovel words, a behaviour that researchers...
How do infants initially determine whether a novel object word labels a specific individual (e.g. Ma...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
Children initially learn the meanings of words by attending to the events and entities that accompan...
One challenging problem that children overcome in learning new words is recognizing the hierarchical...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
When we think of children acquiring language, we often think of their acquisition of linguistic stru...
A large literature shows strong developmental links between early language abilities and later cogni...
Children show considerable individual differences in their early vocabularies. While these differenc...
<p>Does children’s curiosity for a particular category (e.g., animals, vehicles) impact their learni...
<div> <div> <div> <p>Methods </p> <p>In an ongoing study, we investigate the influence of category c...
By the end of their first year of life, children are typically able to produce a handful of words. O...
Previous literature shows that language input is related to the language that children produce. Less...
Children are guided by constraints and biases in word learning. In the case of the shape bias—the te...
Word learning implies learning of both a phonological form and its referent. For nouns, the referent...
Children tend to look at name-unknownobjects when they hearnovel words, a behaviour that researchers...
How do infants initially determine whether a novel object word labels a specific individual (e.g. Ma...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
Children initially learn the meanings of words by attending to the events and entities that accompan...
One challenging problem that children overcome in learning new words is recognizing the hierarchical...
Previous research indicates learning words facilitates categorisation. The current study explores ho...
When we think of children acquiring language, we often think of their acquisition of linguistic stru...
A large literature shows strong developmental links between early language abilities and later cogni...