Vocabulary learning is deceptively hard, but toddlers often make it look easy. Prior theories proposed that children’s rapid acquisition of words is based on language-specific knowledge and constraints. In contrast, more recent work converges on the view that word learning proceeds via domain-general processes that are tuned to richly structured—not impoverished—input. We argue that new theoretical insights, coupled with methodological tools, have pushed the field toward an appreciation of simple, content-free processes working together as a system to support the acquisition of words. We illustrate this by considering three central phenomena of early language development: referential ambiguity, fast-mapping, and the vocabulary spurt
My research investigates why nouns are learned\ud disproportionately more frequently than other kind...
The work reported here experimentally investigates a striking generalization about vocabulary acquis...
These are behavioural data from experiments on children's word learning. The experiments typically a...
There has been little investigation of the way source monitoring, the ability to track the source of...
Children can learn aspects of the meaning of a new word on the basis of only a few incidental exposu...
The work reported here experimentally investigates a striking generalization about vocabulary acquis...
Abstract only availableA huge proportion of children's early vocabularies consists of nouns. Researc...
Compared to other aspects of language development, such as acquiring grammar, we perhaps take for gr...
When young children encounter a word they do not know, their guesses about what the word might mean ...
Young language learners are able to map a word onto its ref-erent from an infinite number of possibl...
Η ΠΕΡΙΛΗΨΗ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΑΙ ΜΕΣΑ ΣΤΟ ΑΡΧΕΙΟ PDFThe ability to acquire new words draws on cognitive, linguis...
Infants do not learn words at a constant rate. During the second year of life, a dramatic increase i...
It is becoming increasingly clear that the way that children acquire cognitive representations depen...
Children who rapidly recognize and interpret familiar words typically have accelerated lexical growt...
Young children, with no prior knowledge, learn word meanings from a highly noisy and ambiguous input...
My research investigates why nouns are learned\ud disproportionately more frequently than other kind...
The work reported here experimentally investigates a striking generalization about vocabulary acquis...
These are behavioural data from experiments on children's word learning. The experiments typically a...
There has been little investigation of the way source monitoring, the ability to track the source of...
Children can learn aspects of the meaning of a new word on the basis of only a few incidental exposu...
The work reported here experimentally investigates a striking generalization about vocabulary acquis...
Abstract only availableA huge proportion of children's early vocabularies consists of nouns. Researc...
Compared to other aspects of language development, such as acquiring grammar, we perhaps take for gr...
When young children encounter a word they do not know, their guesses about what the word might mean ...
Young language learners are able to map a word onto its ref-erent from an infinite number of possibl...
Η ΠΕΡΙΛΗΨΗ ΒΡΙΣΚΕΤΑΙ ΜΕΣΑ ΣΤΟ ΑΡΧΕΙΟ PDFThe ability to acquire new words draws on cognitive, linguis...
Infants do not learn words at a constant rate. During the second year of life, a dramatic increase i...
It is becoming increasingly clear that the way that children acquire cognitive representations depen...
Children who rapidly recognize and interpret familiar words typically have accelerated lexical growt...
Young children, with no prior knowledge, learn word meanings from a highly noisy and ambiguous input...
My research investigates why nouns are learned\ud disproportionately more frequently than other kind...
The work reported here experimentally investigates a striking generalization about vocabulary acquis...
These are behavioural data from experiments on children's word learning. The experiments typically a...