Affiliation:
1. Department for Psychology of Language University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany
2. Leibniz Science Campus Primate Cognition Göttingen Germany
3. School of Psychology and Social Work University of Hull Hull UK
4. Department of Language Science & Technology Saarland University Saarbrücken Germany
Abstract
AbstractPrevious studies showed that word learning is affected by children's existing knowledge. For instance, knowledge of semantic category aids word learning, whereas a dense phonological neighbourhood impedes learning of similar‐sounding words. Here, we examined to what extent children associate similar‐sounding words (e.g., rat and cat) with objects of the same semantic category (e.g., both are animals), that is, to what extent children assume meaning overlap given form overlap between two words. We tested this by first presenting children (N = 93, Mage = 22.4 months) with novel word‐object associations. Then, we examined the extent to which children assume that a similar sounding novel label, that is, a phonological neighbour, refers to a similar looking object, that is, a likely semantic neighbour, as opposed to a dissimilar looking object. Were children to preferentially fixate the similar‐looking novel object, it would suggest that systematic word form‐meaning relations aid referent selection in young children. While we did not find any evidence for such word form‐meaning systematicity, we demonstrated that children showed robust learning for the trained novel word‐object associations, and were able to discriminate between similar‐sounding labels and also similar‐looking objects. Thus, we argue that unlike iconicity which appears early in vocabulary development, we find no evidence for systematicity in early referent selection.
Subject
Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology