What makes a word easy to learn? We know that early-learned words tend to be frequent and name concrete referents. Here we investigate a novel predictor--a word's surprisal -- the ease of predicting it given a context. We computed surprisal for words in child-directed speech and used it to predict age of acquisition (AoA) while controlling for known predictors such as concreteness, frequency, and the mean length of the utterances in which the word appeared. Predicates with greater surprisal (i.e., those less predictable from context) were learned later. Noun learning was not dependent on surprisal. Surprisal was a powerful mediator of both frequency and concreteness, reducing the ordinarily strong effect of frequency and concreteness on AoA...
Humans complete complex commonplace tasks, such as understanding sentences, with striking speed and ...
Are there individual differences in children’s prediction of upcoming linguistic input and what do t...
We investigated the effect of word sur-prisal on the EEG signal during sen-tence reading. On each wo...
What makes a word easy to learn? We know that early-learned words tend to be frequent and name concr...
This paper investigates the use of word surprisal, a measure of the predictability of a word in a gi...
Does knowing certain words help children learn other words? We hypothesized that knowledge of more g...
By age 2, children are developing foundational language processing skills, such as quickly recognizi...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Vocabulary knowledge and speed of lexical access are early components of linguistic skill that co-de...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...
Language processing in adults is facilitated by an expert ability to generate detailed predictions a...
Early acquired words are processed faster than later acquired words in lexical and semantictasks. De...
Human language has two fundamental requirements: it must allow competent speakers to exchange messa...
Probabilistic accounts of language process-ing can be psychologically tested by com-paring word-read...
What factors determine whether a young child will learn a new word? Although there are surely numero...
Humans complete complex commonplace tasks, such as understanding sentences, with striking speed and ...
Are there individual differences in children’s prediction of upcoming linguistic input and what do t...
We investigated the effect of word sur-prisal on the EEG signal during sen-tence reading. On each wo...
What makes a word easy to learn? We know that early-learned words tend to be frequent and name concr...
This paper investigates the use of word surprisal, a measure of the predictability of a word in a gi...
Does knowing certain words help children learn other words? We hypothesized that knowledge of more g...
By age 2, children are developing foundational language processing skills, such as quickly recognizi...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Vocabulary knowledge and speed of lexical access are early components of linguistic skill that co-de...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...
Language processing in adults is facilitated by an expert ability to generate detailed predictions a...
Early acquired words are processed faster than later acquired words in lexical and semantictasks. De...
Human language has two fundamental requirements: it must allow competent speakers to exchange messa...
Probabilistic accounts of language process-ing can be psychologically tested by com-paring word-read...
What factors determine whether a young child will learn a new word? Although there are surely numero...
Humans complete complex commonplace tasks, such as understanding sentences, with striking speed and ...
Are there individual differences in children’s prediction of upcoming linguistic input and what do t...
We investigated the effect of word sur-prisal on the EEG signal during sen-tence reading. On each wo...