Journal Article10.1017/S030500090001206X
Linguistic input and early word meaning.
TL;DR: There was a strong relationship between the children's initial use of words and the most frequently occurring use of these words by the mothers, and it was found that although the majority of theChildren's first words were context-bound, a significant number were referential.
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Abstract: Four mother–child dyads were videotaped in a longitudinal study of the relationship between linguistic input to children and early lexical development. Diary records were also kept by the mothers and, together with the videorecordings, were used to identify the contexts in which the children produced their first words. These were compared with the contexts in which the mothers used these same words. It was found that there was a strong relationship between the children's initial use of words and the most frequently occurring use of these words by the mothers. It was also found that although the majority of the children's first words were context-bound, a significant number were referential. The implications of these findings for current theoretical proposals concerning early lexical development are discussed.
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Citations
The Relation of Children's Single Word Utterances to Single Word Utterances in the Input.
TL;DR: The results suggest that children's single-word utterances are similar to, and probably learned from, single- word utterances of caretakers expressing the same specific communicative intents.
Early Lexical Development and Maternal Speech: A Comparison of Children's Initial and Subsequent Uses of Words.
TL;DR: The findings indicate that the role of linguistic input in early lexical development may decline quite sharply once the child has established initial uses for words.
Acquisition of Demonstratives in English and Spanish
TL;DR: The present work re-evaluates the long-standing claim that demonstratives are among infants’ earliest and most common words and expands the knowledge of the foundations of deictic communication, and of the methodological challenges of assessing early production of function words.
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References
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Child's Talk: Learning to Use Language
Jerome S. Bruner
- 01 Jan 1983
TL;DR: Bruner as mentioned in this paper proposes a language acquisition support system that frames the interactions between adult and child in such a way as to allow the child to proceed from learning how to refer to objects to learning to make a request of another human being.
2.4K
•Book
The Emergence of Symbols: Cognition and Communication in Infancy
Elizabeth Bates,Laura Benigni +1 more
- 07 Apr 2015
1.5K