| Literature DB >> 15323116 |
Gil Diesendruck1, Lori Markson, Nameera Akhtar, Ayelet Reudor.
Abstract
Seventy-two 2-year-olds participated in a study designed to test two competing accounts of the effect of contextual change on children's ability to learn a word for an object. The mechanistic account hypothesizes that any change in context that highlights a target object will lead to word learning; the social-pragmatic account maintains that a change in context must be perceived as relevant to the speaker's communicative intentions. Consistent with the latter account, we found that children learned the word when a change in context was intentional but not when it was accidental, and children failed to learn the word for the highlighted object when a speaker naive to the preceding context named the object.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15323116 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2004.00320.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Sci ISSN: 1363-755X