Two experiments investigated why preschool children sometimes produce multiple words for a referent (i.e. polynomy), but other times seem to allow only one word. In Experiment 1, 40 three- and four-year-olds completed a modification of Deák & Maratsos' (1998) naming task. Although social demands to produce multiple words were reduced, children produced, on average, more than two words per object. Number of words produced was predicted by receptive vocabulary. Lexical insight (i.e. knowing that a word refers to function or appearance) and metalexical beliefs (i.e. that a hypothetical referent has one label, or more than one) were not preconditions of polynomy. Polynomy was independent of bias to map novel words to unfamiliar referents. I...
It is well-established that toddlers can correctly select a novel referent from an ambiguous array i...
A candidate process for explaining the rapid vocabulary acquisition during the preschool years is ‘‘...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...
Two experiments investigated why preschool children sometimes produce multiple words for a referent ...
Children tend to look at name-unknownobjects when they hearnovel words, a behaviour that researchers...
What mechanism implements the mutual exclusivity bias to map novel labels to objects without names? ...
What mechanism implements the mutual exclusivity bias to map novel labels to objects without names? ...
In two experiments, adults and children were tested in an object-selection task that examined whethe...
Abstract only availableA huge proportion of children's early vocabularies consists of nouns. Researc...
Word learning implies learning of both a phonological form and its referent. For nouns, the referent...
Previous literature shows that language input is related to the language that children produce. Less...
This study investigated the constraints 3-year old preschoolers resort to in learning a new word or ...
Here we study polysemy as a potential learning bias in vocabulary learning in children. We employ a ...
A large body of research indicates that children can map words to categories and generalize the labe...
We investigated the influence of exposure to phonologically similar words on four-year-olds' acqui...
It is well-established that toddlers can correctly select a novel referent from an ambiguous array i...
A candidate process for explaining the rapid vocabulary acquisition during the preschool years is ‘‘...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...
Two experiments investigated why preschool children sometimes produce multiple words for a referent ...
Children tend to look at name-unknownobjects when they hearnovel words, a behaviour that researchers...
What mechanism implements the mutual exclusivity bias to map novel labels to objects without names? ...
What mechanism implements the mutual exclusivity bias to map novel labels to objects without names? ...
In two experiments, adults and children were tested in an object-selection task that examined whethe...
Abstract only availableA huge proportion of children's early vocabularies consists of nouns. Researc...
Word learning implies learning of both a phonological form and its referent. For nouns, the referent...
Previous literature shows that language input is related to the language that children produce. Less...
This study investigated the constraints 3-year old preschoolers resort to in learning a new word or ...
Here we study polysemy as a potential learning bias in vocabulary learning in children. We employ a ...
A large body of research indicates that children can map words to categories and generalize the labe...
We investigated the influence of exposure to phonologically similar words on four-year-olds' acqui...
It is well-established that toddlers can correctly select a novel referent from an ambiguous array i...
A candidate process for explaining the rapid vocabulary acquisition during the preschool years is ‘‘...
Children tend to choose an unfamiliar object rather than a familiar one when asked to find the refer...