Literature DB >> 27817761

Words are not enough: how preschoolers' integration of perspective and emotion informs their referential understanding.

Susan A Graham1, Valerie San Juan1, Melanie Khu1.   

Abstract

When linguistic information alone does not clarify a speaker's intended meaning, skilled communicators can draw on a variety of cues to infer communicative intent. In this paper, we review research examining the developmental emergence of preschoolers' sensitivity to a communicative partner's perspective. We focus particularly on preschoolers' tendency to use cues both within the communicative context (i.e. a speaker's visual access to information) and within the speech signal itself (i.e. emotional prosody) to make on-line inferences about communicative intent. Our review demonstrates that preschoolers' ability to use visual and emotional cues of perspective to guide language interpretation is not uniform across tasks, is sometimes related to theory of mind and executive function skills, and, at certain points of development, is only revealed by implicit measures of language processing.

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27817761     DOI: 10.1017/S0305000916000519

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Lang        ISSN: 0305-0009


  1 in total

1.  How young children integrate information sources to infer the meaning of words.

Authors:  Manuel Bohn; Michael Henry Tessler; Megan Merrick; Michael C Frank
Journal:  Nat Hum Behav       Date:  2021-07-01
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.