International audienceWe examine the beginning of the acquisition of the relative order of function and content words, a fundamental but cross-linguistically highly variable aspect of grammar. A review of the existing empirical literature shows that infants as young as 8 months of age can distinguish between functors and content words, and have a rudimentary knowledge of the order of these two universal lexical categories in their native language. Furthermore, human adults and nonhuman animals such as rodents process the same linguistic information differently from infants, emphasizing the developmental relevance of bootstrapping function/content word order from surface cues available in the input. We discuss the implications of these findi...
International audienceWhile content words (e.g., 'dog') tend to carry meaning, function words (e.g.,...
This thesis investigates the strategies infants use to generalise labels to different objects in the...
When learning a new language, grammar--although difficult--is very important, as grammatical rules d...
We examine the beginning of the acquisition of the relative order of function and content words, a f...
Word order is one of the earliest aspects of grammar that the child acquires, since her early uttera...
One major controversy in the field of language development concerns the nature of children’s early g...
A recurrent question regarding language acquisition is the extent to which the mechanisms human infa...
The linguistic distinction between function words (functors) (e.g., the, he, that, on…), signaling g...
Human learning, although highly flexible and efficient, is constrained in ways that facilitate or im...
Human learning, although highly flexible and efficient, is constrained in ways that facilitate or im...
Do infants learn their early words in isolation? Or do they integrate new words into an inter-connec...
For decades, a spirited debate has existed over whether infants' remarkable capacity to learn words ...
The input contains perceptually available cues, which might allow young infants to discover abstract...
Learning a new word is, in part, acquiring an asso-ciation between the word and the object or event ...
Most work on competing cues in language acquisition has focussed on what happens when cues compete w...
International audienceWhile content words (e.g., 'dog') tend to carry meaning, function words (e.g.,...
This thesis investigates the strategies infants use to generalise labels to different objects in the...
When learning a new language, grammar--although difficult--is very important, as grammatical rules d...
We examine the beginning of the acquisition of the relative order of function and content words, a f...
Word order is one of the earliest aspects of grammar that the child acquires, since her early uttera...
One major controversy in the field of language development concerns the nature of children’s early g...
A recurrent question regarding language acquisition is the extent to which the mechanisms human infa...
The linguistic distinction between function words (functors) (e.g., the, he, that, on…), signaling g...
Human learning, although highly flexible and efficient, is constrained in ways that facilitate or im...
Human learning, although highly flexible and efficient, is constrained in ways that facilitate or im...
Do infants learn their early words in isolation? Or do they integrate new words into an inter-connec...
For decades, a spirited debate has existed over whether infants' remarkable capacity to learn words ...
The input contains perceptually available cues, which might allow young infants to discover abstract...
Learning a new word is, in part, acquiring an asso-ciation between the word and the object or event ...
Most work on competing cues in language acquisition has focussed on what happens when cues compete w...
International audienceWhile content words (e.g., 'dog') tend to carry meaning, function words (e.g.,...
This thesis investigates the strategies infants use to generalise labels to different objects in the...
When learning a new language, grammar--although difficult--is very important, as grammatical rules d...