Literature DB >> 21244958

Object perception and object naming in early development.

B Landau1, L Smith, S Jones.   

Abstract

Among our most fundamental capacities are those that allow us to perceive, categorize and name objects. Recently, controversy has surrounded the question of how young children learn names for objects, in particular, the relative roles of perception and higher-level world knowledge. It is well known that adults depend strongly on conceptual knowledge in a variety of categorization tasks, including object naming. We argue, however, that perception may play a special role in early object naming and, in particular, that certain kinds of world knowledge known to guide adult naming may come to guide naming only rather late in development. Building early mechanisms of naming on a perceptual foundation that may be encapsulated, and thus shut off from more reflective processes, may explain in part why young children can easily and rapidly learn names for things from the adults around them, despite the fact that adults and children may possess very different conceptual organizations.

Entities:  

Year:  1998        PMID: 21244958     DOI: 10.1016/s1364-6613(97)01111-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci        ISSN: 1364-6613            Impact factor:   20.229


  10 in total

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8.  MCA-NMF: Multimodal Concept Acquisition with Non-Negative Matrix Factorization.

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9.  Perceptual Connectivity Influences Toddlers' Attention to Known Objects and Subsequent Label Processing.

Authors:  Ryan E Peters; Justin B Kueser; Arielle Borovsky
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2021-01-27

10.  How the Brain Dynamically Constructs Sentence-Level Meanings From Word-Level Features.

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  10 in total

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