Publication | Open Access
“Really? She Blicked the Baby?”
218
Citations
15
References
2009
Year
Children Use SyntaxLanguage DevelopmentPsycholinguisticsLanguage LearningLanguage ProcessingSecond Language AcquisitionSyntaxCognitive LinguisticsChild LanguageCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceNovel VerbFemale InfanticideNew VerbLanguage ComprehensionLinguistics
Children use syntax to guide verb learning. We asked whether the syntactic structure in which a novel verb occurs is meaningful to children even without a concurrent scene from which to infer the verb's semantic content. In two experiments, 2-year-olds observed dialogues in which interlocutors used a new verb in transitive ("Jane blicked the baby!") or intransitive ("Jane blicked!") sentences. The children later heard the verb in isolation ("Find blicking!") while watching a one-participant event and a two-participant event presented side by side. Children who had heard transitive dialogues looked reliably longer at the two-participant event than did those who had heard intransitive dialogues. This effect persisted even when children were tested on a different day, but disappeared when no novel verb accompanied the test events (Experiment 2). Thus, 2-year-olds gather useful combinatorial information about a novel verb simply from hearing it in sentences, and later retrieve that information to guide interpretation of the verb.
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