Bootstrapping where? Location changes disrupt intransitive verb mapping

Kaitlyn P. Harrigan, Monica Bagnoli
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Children utilize a range of cues in verb learning. The current studies explore children’s weighting of two different cues for verb-meaning: number of syntactic arguments and event location. Naigles (1990) demonstrated that children use syntactic bootstrapping in mapping transitive and intransitive verbs—they hypothesize that intransitive verbs refer to one-participant events and transitive verbs refer to two-participant events. Previous work also indicates that children are sensitive to the location that an event took place when they are learning new verbs. The current study builds on this work, exploring the role of location changes in mapping new transitive and intransitive verbs. We find that children robustly link transitive verbs to two-person events but are weaker overall weaker linking intransitive verbs to one-person events. Children are, however, less likely to link intransitive verbs to one-person events when the event location has changed, suggesting that they are influenced by background changes when interpreting intransitive verbs.
引导在哪里?位置的变化破坏了不及物动词的映射
孩子们在动词学习中利用一系列线索。目前的研究探讨了儿童对动词意义的两种不同线索的权重:句法参数的数量和事件位置。Naigles(1990)证明儿童在映射及物动词和不及物动词时使用句法引导——他们假设不及物动词指的是单参与者事件,及物动词指的是双参与者事件。以前的研究也表明,当孩子们学习新动词时,他们对事件发生的地点很敏感。当前的研究建立在这项工作的基础上,探索位置变化在映射新的及物动词和不及物动词中的作用。我们发现儿童强烈地将及物动词与两人事件联系起来,但整体上较弱地将不及物动词与一人事件联系起来。然而,当事件地点发生变化时,儿童不太可能将不及物动词与一人事件联系起来,这表明他们在解释不及物动词时受到背景变化的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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