Sound versus meaning: What matters most in early word learning?

S. Sahni, T. Rogers
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Previous work suggests that phonological neighborhood density is a key factor in shaping early lexical acquisition. Such studies have, however, have not considered how semantic neighborhoods may influence word-learning. We studied how phonological and semantic densities affect both comprehension and production of nouns from the Macarthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory (MCDI). New measures of semantic and phonological densities, along with child-directed word frequency counts were used to predict the percentage of children who know each word at different ages (8 - 30 months) as indicated in MCDI lexical norms. Production was predicted by frequency and phonological density at all time points, replicating previous research. Semantic density predicted production only at 30 months. Comprehension norms were predicted by frequency and semantic density, and never by phonological density. Two- and three-way interactions reveal that semantic density may moderate effects in production, while sound density may moderate effects in comprehension.
声音与意义:早期单词学习中什么最重要?
先前的研究表明,语音邻域密度是形成早期词汇习得的关键因素。然而,这些研究并没有考虑到语义邻域是如何影响单词学习的。我们研究了语音和语义密度如何影响麦克阿瑟-贝茨交际发展量表(MCDI)中名词的理解和产生。使用语义和语音密度的新测量,以及儿童导向的词频计数来预测MCDI词汇规范中不同年龄(8 - 30个月)的儿童认识每个单词的百分比。通过频率和语音密度在所有时间点预测产量,重复了先前的研究。语义密度预测产量仅为30个月。理解规范是由频率和语义密度预测的,而不是由语音密度预测的。双向和三向交互作用表明,语义密度可能调节生产效应,而声音密度可能调节理解效应。
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