We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We embed the mechanism for distributional analysis within an existing model of language acquisition (MOSAIC) that encodes increasingly long utterances, and compare results against a measure of ‘noun richness’ in child speech. We show that, cross-linguistically, the mechanism’s success in building an early noun class is inversely related to the complexity of the determiner and noun gender system, and that merging of determiners gives very similar results across languages. These results suggest that children may represent grammatical categories at multiple levels of abstraction that reflect both the larger category as well as its finer structure. We...
This paper is a longitudinal investigation of adjective use by children aged 1;8−2;8, and their care...
Several phonological and prosodic properties of words have been shown to relate to differences betwe...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...
We present a computational model of the acquisition of German case that is evaluated against empiric...
Eyetracking data collected from two-year-old infants, stimuli and analysis scripts. In the current s...
The aim of the present work was to develop a computational model of how children acquire inflectiona...
It has long been claimed that the child’s experience of language is not sufficient to enable them to...
The aim of this large-scale, preregistered, cross-linguistic study was to mediate between theories o...
While usage-based approaches to language development enjoy considerable support from computational s...
Language acquisition may be one of the most difficult tasks that children face during development. T...
We analysed both structural and functional aspects of sentences containing the four adverbials “afte...
Eyetracking data collected from 10-month-old infants, stimuli. In the current study, parents read th...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
a b s t r a c t Numerous distributional cues in the child's environment may potentially assist ...
This paper is a longitudinal investigation of adjective use by children aged 1;8−2;8, and their care...
Several phonological and prosodic properties of words have been shown to relate to differences betwe...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...
We present a computational model of the acquisition of German case that is evaluated against empiric...
Eyetracking data collected from two-year-old infants, stimuli and analysis scripts. In the current s...
The aim of the present work was to develop a computational model of how children acquire inflectiona...
It has long been claimed that the child’s experience of language is not sufficient to enable them to...
The aim of this large-scale, preregistered, cross-linguistic study was to mediate between theories o...
While usage-based approaches to language development enjoy considerable support from computational s...
Language acquisition may be one of the most difficult tasks that children face during development. T...
We analysed both structural and functional aspects of sentences containing the four adverbials “afte...
Eyetracking data collected from 10-month-old infants, stimuli. In the current study, parents read th...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
Children show a remarkable degree of consistency in learning some words earlier than others. What pa...
a b s t r a c t Numerous distributional cues in the child's environment may potentially assist ...
This paper is a longitudinal investigation of adjective use by children aged 1;8−2;8, and their care...
Several phonological and prosodic properties of words have been shown to relate to differences betwe...
Why do children learn some words before others? A large body of behavioral research has identified p...