Literature DB >> 11294231

Six-month-old infants' preference for lexical words.

R Shi1, J F Werker.   

Abstract

Previous work has shown that newborn infants categorically discriminate the fundamental syntactic category distinction between lexical and grammatical words. In this article, we show that by the age of 6 months, infants prefer to listen to lexical over grammatical words. In Experiment 1, infants were habituated to a list of either lexical or grammatical words, and then tested on new lists of words from the same and the contrasting categories. The infants showed recovery to lexical words after habituation to grammatical words but not vice versa. This asymmetry indicates a possible preference for lexical words. In Experiments 2 and 3, preference was assessed directly by presenting infants with alternating trials of lexical and grammatical words, in the central-fixation preference procedure. The infants looked significantly longer during lexical-word than grammatical-word trials. These results show that by 6 months, infants attend preferentially to lexical words. The implications of this emerging attentional preference for subsequent language acquisition are discussed.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11294231     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9280.00312

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  12 in total

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Authors:  Alia Martin; Catharyn C Shelton; Jessica A Sommerville
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3.  Prosody cues word order in 7-month-old bilingual infants.

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Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 14.919

4.  Listening through voices: Infant statistical word segmentation across multiple speakers.

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5.  Grammatical Aspect in Early Child Mandarin: Evidence from a Preferential Looking Experiment.

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Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2018-12

Review 6.  When context is and isn't helpful: A corpus study of naturalistic speech.

Authors:  Kasia Hitczenko; Reiko Mazuka; Micha Elsner; Naomi H Feldman
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2020-08

7.  Prosodic cues to word order: what level of representation?

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Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2012-10-30

Review 8.  Infant perceptual development for faces and spoken words: an integrated approach.

Authors:  Tamara L Watson; Rachel A Robbins; Catherine T Best
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2014-08-04       Impact factor: 3.038

9.  Stuttering on function and content words across age groups of German speakers who stutter.

Authors:  Katharina Dworzynski; Peter Howell; James Au-Yeung; Dieter Rommel
Journal:  J Multiling Commun Disord       Date:  2004-07-01

10.  Infants generalize representations of statistically segmented words.

Authors:  Katharine Graf Estes
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2012-10-29
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