Although 2-year-old English- or Dutch-speaking children tend to use correct subject-object word order in their own utterances, they appear to make a substantial number of word order errors in their comprehension of other people’s utterances. This pattern of adult-like production but poor comprehension is challenging for linguistic theory. While most approaches to language acquisition explain this pattern from extra-linguistic factors such as task demands, the constraint-based approach Optimality Theory predicts this asymmetry between production and comprehension to arise as a result of the linguistic competition between constraints on word order and animacy. This study tests this prediction by investigating how children’s comprehension and ...
How children learn grammar is one of the most fundamental questions in cognitive science. Two theore...
Children and adults follow cues like case marking and word order in their assignment of semantic rol...
Act-out and intermodal preferential looking (IPL) tasks were administered to 67 English children age...
Although 2-year-old English- or Dutch-speaking children tend to use correct subject-object word orde...
Across languages, children do not comprehend 3SG/3PL subject–verb agreement before age five, despite...
This thesis compares and contrasts three different groups of language learners - second language chi...
Kinderen begrijpen woorden en zinnen meestal eerder dan dat ze diezelfde woorden en zinnen zelf kunn...
This paper discusses a developmental paradox, namely that children’s performance in language product...
This paper discusses a developmental paradox, namely that children’s performance in language product...
Most work on competing cues in language acquisition has focussed on what happens when cues compete w...
Data from child language comprehension show that children make errors in interpreting pronouns as la...
This book asserts that language is a signaling system rather than a code, based in part on such rese...
Data from child language comprehension show that children make errors in interpreting pronouns as la...
This paper examines the hypothesis that children attend to and encode events of cardinal transitivi...
How children learn grammar is one of the most fundamental questions in cognitive science. Two theore...
How children learn grammar is one of the most fundamental questions in cognitive science. Two theore...
Children and adults follow cues like case marking and word order in their assignment of semantic rol...
Act-out and intermodal preferential looking (IPL) tasks were administered to 67 English children age...
Although 2-year-old English- or Dutch-speaking children tend to use correct subject-object word orde...
Across languages, children do not comprehend 3SG/3PL subject–verb agreement before age five, despite...
This thesis compares and contrasts three different groups of language learners - second language chi...
Kinderen begrijpen woorden en zinnen meestal eerder dan dat ze diezelfde woorden en zinnen zelf kunn...
This paper discusses a developmental paradox, namely that children’s performance in language product...
This paper discusses a developmental paradox, namely that children’s performance in language product...
Most work on competing cues in language acquisition has focussed on what happens when cues compete w...
Data from child language comprehension show that children make errors in interpreting pronouns as la...
This book asserts that language is a signaling system rather than a code, based in part on such rese...
Data from child language comprehension show that children make errors in interpreting pronouns as la...
This paper examines the hypothesis that children attend to and encode events of cardinal transitivi...
How children learn grammar is one of the most fundamental questions in cognitive science. Two theore...
How children learn grammar is one of the most fundamental questions in cognitive science. Two theore...
Children and adults follow cues like case marking and word order in their assignment of semantic rol...
Act-out and intermodal preferential looking (IPL) tasks were administered to 67 English children age...