Our original target article highlighted some significant shortcomings in the current state of child language research: a large skew in our evidential base towards English and a handful of other Indo-European languages that partly has its origins in a lack of researcher diversity. In this article, we respond to the 21 commentaries on our original article. The commentaries highlighted both the importance of attention to typological features of languages and the environments and contexts in which languages are acquired, with many commentators providing concrete suggestions on how we address the data skew. In this response, we synthesise the main themes of the commentaries and make suggestions for how the field can move towards both improving d...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
A comprehensive theory of child language acquisition requires an evidential base that is representat...
Any scientific discipline undoubtedly encounters different challenges in their development over time...
The 30-million-word gap, the quantified difference in the amount of speech that children growing up ...
A comprehensive theory of language acquisition must explain how human infants can learn any one of t...
This paper argues that the language sciences are on the brink of major changes in primary data, meth...
The field of first language acquisition (FLA) needs to take into account data from the broadest typo...
In the context of ever-changing global movement of peoples in and between countries, linguistic dive...
Thousands of individuals in the United States, Canada, and elsewhere are currently endeavoring to le...
A comprehensive theory of language acquisition must explain how human infants can learn any one of t...
This paper reports on an on-going project designed to collect comparable corpus data on child langua...
Humans have an innate capacity to learn language. This is an undisputed fact. However, what this cap...
This paper reports on an on-going project designed to collect comparable corpus data on child langua...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
A comprehensive theory of child language acquisition requires an evidential base that is representat...
Any scientific discipline undoubtedly encounters different challenges in their development over time...
The 30-million-word gap, the quantified difference in the amount of speech that children growing up ...
A comprehensive theory of language acquisition must explain how human infants can learn any one of t...
This paper argues that the language sciences are on the brink of major changes in primary data, meth...
The field of first language acquisition (FLA) needs to take into account data from the broadest typo...
In the context of ever-changing global movement of peoples in and between countries, linguistic dive...
Thousands of individuals in the United States, Canada, and elsewhere are currently endeavoring to le...
A comprehensive theory of language acquisition must explain how human infants can learn any one of t...
This paper reports on an on-going project designed to collect comparable corpus data on child langua...
Humans have an innate capacity to learn language. This is an undisputed fact. However, what this cap...
This paper reports on an on-going project designed to collect comparable corpus data on child langua...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...
The river one dips one’s toes into from one editorial to the next is never the same, as Heraclitus m...