Selected spontaneous errors of word choice made between the ages of about 2 and 5 by 2 children whose language development has been followed longitudinally were analyzed for clues to semantic development. The errors involved the children's occasional replacement of a contextually required word by a semantically similar word after weeks or months of using both words appropriately. Because the errors were not present from the beginning and because correct usage prevailed most of the time, the errors cannot be explained by existing accounts of semantic development, which ascribe children's word-choice errors to initial linguistic immaturity. A plausible alternative account likens the errors to adult "slips of the tongue" in which the speaker, ...
Patterns of structure and variation are described in the language development of four children in th...
Given the growing evidence of the integral role that semantic development plays in normal child synt...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...
Selected spontaneous errors of word choice made between the ages of about 2 and 5 by 2 children whos...
This study investigates the onset at periodic intervals in the age range of about two to five years ...
False recognition following presentation of semantically related and phonologically related word lis...
Children aged 2 through 6 years and adults were shown a series of pictures including \u27normal\u27 ...
Disambiguation refers to children’s tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
Words are generally related in meaning and can often be organized into semantic domains. One way chi...
Disambiguation refers to children's tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
False recognition following presentation of semantically related and phonologically related word lis...
Despite arguments for the relative ease of learning common noun meanings, semantic development conti...
When young children encounter a word they do not know, their guesses about what the word might mean ...
Previous research suggests that during a time of rapid growth cially susceptible to errors of retrie...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...
Patterns of structure and variation are described in the language development of four children in th...
Given the growing evidence of the integral role that semantic development plays in normal child synt...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...
Selected spontaneous errors of word choice made between the ages of about 2 and 5 by 2 children whos...
This study investigates the onset at periodic intervals in the age range of about two to five years ...
False recognition following presentation of semantically related and phonologically related word lis...
Children aged 2 through 6 years and adults were shown a series of pictures including \u27normal\u27 ...
Disambiguation refers to children’s tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
Words are generally related in meaning and can often be organized into semantic domains. One way chi...
Disambiguation refers to children's tendency to assign novel labels to unfamiliar rather than famili...
False recognition following presentation of semantically related and phonologically related word lis...
Despite arguments for the relative ease of learning common noun meanings, semantic development conti...
When young children encounter a word they do not know, their guesses about what the word might mean ...
Previous research suggests that during a time of rapid growth cially susceptible to errors of retrie...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...
Patterns of structure and variation are described in the language development of four children in th...
Given the growing evidence of the integral role that semantic development plays in normal child synt...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...