For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the receptive and productive vocabulary of infants using CDIs – checklists of words filled in by the caregiver. While it is generally accepted that the caregiver can reliably say whether the infant knows and/or produces a given word, we lack an estimate for words that are not listed on CDI. In this study, we provide a mathematical model providing a link between CDI reports and a more plausible estimate of vocabulary size. The model is constrained by statistical data collected from a population of infants and is validated on a longitudinal study comparing diary report with CDI measures. MAYOR, Julien, PLUNKETT, Kim. A mathematical insight into the ...
BackgroundAlthough parental checklists are well-known for their potential in indexing young children...
There are increasing reports that individual variation in behavioral and neurophysiological measures...
International audienceThis paper compared the vocabulary size of a group of 250 bilinguals aged 24–3...
For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the re...
For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the r...
For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the r...
For the last 20 years, developmental psychologists have measured the variability in lexical developm...
During the first 2 years of life, an infant's vocabulary grows at an impressive rate. In the current...
The Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs) are parent report measures of vocabulary and other ...
Is parental report of comprehension valid for individual words? If so, how well must an infant know ...
The size of the noun vocabulary children learn is influenced by what the children talk about with th...
Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs) were collected from 669 British children aged between 1...
Two experiments are described which explore the relationship between parental reports of infants' re...
In order to acquire language, infants must extract its building blocks words and master the rules go...
To acquire language, infants must learn how to identify words and linguistic structure in speech. St...
BackgroundAlthough parental checklists are well-known for their potential in indexing young children...
There are increasing reports that individual variation in behavioral and neurophysiological measures...
International audienceThis paper compared the vocabulary size of a group of 250 bilinguals aged 24–3...
For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the re...
For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the r...
For the last twenty years, many researchers interested in language acquisition have quantified the r...
For the last 20 years, developmental psychologists have measured the variability in lexical developm...
During the first 2 years of life, an infant's vocabulary grows at an impressive rate. In the current...
The Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs) are parent report measures of vocabulary and other ...
Is parental report of comprehension valid for individual words? If so, how well must an infant know ...
The size of the noun vocabulary children learn is influenced by what the children talk about with th...
Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs) were collected from 669 British children aged between 1...
Two experiments are described which explore the relationship between parental reports of infants' re...
In order to acquire language, infants must extract its building blocks words and master the rules go...
To acquire language, infants must learn how to identify words and linguistic structure in speech. St...
BackgroundAlthough parental checklists are well-known for their potential in indexing young children...
There are increasing reports that individual variation in behavioral and neurophysiological measures...
International audienceThis paper compared the vocabulary size of a group of 250 bilinguals aged 24–3...