Abstract
The aim of this study was to explain why children have difficulty with
homonymy. Two experiments were conducted with forty-eight children
(Experiment 1) and twenty-four children (Experiment 2). Three- and
four-year-old children had to either select or judge another person's
selection of a different object with the same name, avoiding identical
objects and misnomers. Older children were successful, but despite
possessing the necessary vocabulary, younger children failed these tasks.
Understanding of homonymy was strongly and significantly associated
to understanding of synonymy, and more importantly, understanding of
false belief, even when verbal mental age, chronological age, and control
measures were partialled out. This indicates that children's ability to
understand homonymy results from their ability to make a distinction
characteristic of representation, a distinction fundamental to both
metalinguistic awareness and theory of mind.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
74 articles.
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