Between the first and the second year of life, children improve in their ability to use phonemic contrasts when learning label-object pairings. This improvement may be related to children\u27s experience with the distribution of phonemes across lexical forms. Because phonemes typically occur in different lexical frames (e.g., /d/ and /t/ in doggy and teddy rather than doggy and toggy ), familiarity with words makes similar phonemes more distinct through acquired distinctiveness. In a series of simulations, we demonstrate that English input has the distributional characteristics necessary to facilitate use of phonemic contrasts as a function of increasing familiarity with the lexicon. Further, these simulations support a novel predict...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
Between the first and the second year of life, children improve in their ability to use phonemic con...
Whereas young children accept words that differ by only a single phoneme as equivalent labels for no...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
When learning language, young children are faced with many seemingly formidable challenges, includin...
Language learning processes are often examined by learning miniature languages in the lab, where con...
How does the perception of a new phoneme contrast develop? Are differences found across age groups? ...
One hypothesis to explain perceptual narrowing in speech perception is the distributional learning a...
This study examined the ability of 20 preschool children with functional phonological delays and 34 ...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...
In this paper we provide a computational exploration of changes in levels of representation in child...
A key omission from many accounts of children's early word learning is the linguistic knowledge that...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
Between the first and the second year of life, children improve in their ability to use phonemic con...
Whereas young children accept words that differ by only a single phoneme as equivalent labels for no...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
When learning language, young children are faced with many seemingly formidable challenges, includin...
Language learning processes are often examined by learning miniature languages in the lab, where con...
How does the perception of a new phoneme contrast develop? Are differences found across age groups? ...
One hypothesis to explain perceptual narrowing in speech perception is the distributional learning a...
This study examined the ability of 20 preschool children with functional phonological delays and 34 ...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...
In this paper we provide a computational exploration of changes in levels of representation in child...
A key omission from many accounts of children's early word learning is the linguistic knowledge that...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...
Contrastive feature hierarchies have been developed and used for some time in depicting typical phon...