Young toddlers' word comprehension is flexible and efficient.


Autoria(s): Bergelson, E; Swingley, D
Cobertura

United States

Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Much of what is known about word recognition in toddlers comes from eyetracking studies. Here we show that the speed and facility with which children recognize words, as revealed in such studies, cannot be attributed to a task-specific, closed-set strategy; rather, children's gaze to referents of spoken nouns reflects successful search of the lexicon. Toddlers' spoken word comprehension was examined in the context of pictures that had two possible names (such as a cup of juice which could be called "cup" or "juice") and pictures that had only one likely name for toddlers (such as "apple"), using a visual world eye-tracking task and a picture-labeling task (n = 77, mean age, 21 months). Toddlers were just as fast and accurate in fixating named pictures with two likely names as pictures with one. If toddlers do name pictures to themselves, the name provides no apparent benefit in word recognition, because there is no cost to understanding an alternative lexical construal of the picture. In toddlers, as in adults, spoken words rapidly evoke their referents.

Formato

e73359 - ?

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23991189

PONE-D-12-38615

PLoS One, 2013, 8 (8), pp. e73359 - ?

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/12630

1932-6203

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

PLoS One

10.1371/journal.pone.0073359

Palavras-Chave #Comprehension #Humans #Infant #Language
Tipo

Journal Article