Literature DB >> 18070628

The kindergarten path effect revisited: children's use of context in processing structural ambiguities.

Anna R Weighall1.   

Abstract

Research with adults has shown that ambiguous spoken sentences are resolved efficiently, exploiting multiple cues--including referential context--to select the intended meaning. Paradoxically, children appear to be insensitive to referential cues when resolving ambiguous sentences, relying instead on statistical properties intrinsic to the language such as verb biases. The possibility that children's insensitivity to referential context may be an artifact of the experimental design used in previous work was explored with 60 4- to 11-year-olds. An act-out task was designed to discourage children from making incorrect pragmatic inferences and to prevent premature and ballistic responses by enforcing delayed actions. Performance on this task was compared directly with the standard act-out task used in previous studies. The results suggest that young children (5 years) do not use contextual information, even under conditions designed to maximize their use of such cues, but that adult-like processing is evident by approximately 8 years of age. These results support and extend previous findings by Trueswell and colleagues (Cognition (1999), Vol. 73, pp. 89-134) and are consistent with a constraint-based learning account of children's linguistic development.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18070628     DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2007.10.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol        ISSN: 0022-0965


  15 in total

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8.  Children's (in)ability to recover from garden paths in a verb-final language: evidence for developing control in sentence processing.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-01-17       Impact factor: 3.240

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