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How Children Learn the Meanings of Nouns and Verbs

How Children Learn the Meanings of Nouns and Verbs. Tingting “Rachel” Chung Ph. D. Candidate in Developmental Psychology University of Pittsburgh. What’s in a word?. beef /bif/ Noun (mass) Cow/ox meat. Root Phonology Grammatical category Meaning Morphology.

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How Children Learn the Meanings of Nouns and Verbs

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  1. How Children Learn the Meanings of Nouns and Verbs Tingting “Rachel” Chung Ph. D. Candidate in Developmental Psychology University of Pittsburgh

  2. What’s in a word? beef /bif/ Noun (mass) Cow/ox meat Root Phonology Grammatical category Meaning Morphology

  3. Why is word learning interesting? • Inductive problem - Potentially wide range of hypotheses • Mapping problem – Cross-linguistic variations • High growth rate

  4. Why is word learning interesting? • Inductive problem - Potentially wide range of hypotheses • Mapping problem – Cross-linguistic variations • High growth rate

  5. What’s a Gavagai?

  6. Why is word learning interesting? • Inductive problem - Potentially wide range of hypotheses • Mapping problem – Cross-linguistic variations • High growth rate

  7. Language may organize concepts in different ways • Melissa Bowerman Differences between English and Korean

  8. English-speaking adults

  9. Korean-speaking adults

  10. English-learning 2-year-olds

  11. Korean-learning 2-year-olds

  12. Why is word learning interesting? • Inductive problem - Potentially wide range of hypotheses • Mapping problem – Cross-linguistic variations • High growth rate

  13. Statistics • 10,000 words by 1st grade 5.5 per day from 1.5 to 6 yrs • 40,000 words by 5th grade 20.5 per day from 1st to 5th grade

  14. Sources of information about word meaning • Principles and constraints • Pragmatics • Syntax

  15. Principles and Constraints • The Whole Object Assumption • The Taxonomic Assumption • Mutual Exclusivity

  16. Principles and Constraints • The Whole Object Assumption • The Taxonomic Assumption • Mutual Exclusivity

  17. Whole Object Assumptionin Initial Mappings Evidence Tendency of whole object interpretation • in ambiguous situations • with inappropriate syntax • in languages without count/mass distinction More nouns in early vocabulary Novel nouns learned faster

  18. Whole Object Assumption Criticisms Only roughly 40% of early words are object labels. Children learning Chinese, Japanese, and Korean learn verbs and nouns simultaneously

  19. Whole Object Assumption Explanations Object concepts are richer and more cohesive Ostensive teaching of nouns more prevalent in middle-class Americans

  20. Whole Object Assumption Consequences - speculations Verbs are harder to learn Adjectives are harder to learn e.g., color words (Soja, 1994)

  21. Principles and Constraints • The Whole Object Assumption • The Taxonomic Assumption • Mutual Exclusivity

  22. Find another one Find another dog Taxonomic Assumptionin Word Extensions Evidence

  23. Taxonomic Assumptionin Word Extensions Basic Level (Perceptually based) Early categorization in infancy may be at superordinate level But most early words and extensions are basic-level.

  24. Taxonomic Assumptionin Word Extensions Conceptual extensions

  25. Find another dax Taxonomic Assumptionin Word Extensions Shape Bias

  26. Principles and Constraints • The Whole Object Assumption • The Taxonomic Assumption • Mutual Exclusivity

  27. Mutual Exclusivity Evidence Fast mapping of novel label to novel object when familiar object is present Lack of fast mapping of second labels

  28. Mutual Exclusivity Value Fast-mapping Avoiding redundant hypotheses Overcoming whole object assumption Overriding taxonomic assumption

  29. Nature of Principles and Constraints • Are they language specific? • How and when do children overcome them? • Are they applicable to learning of words in other classes?

  30. Potential Principles and Constraints in Verb Learning • Whole Event Assumption? • Taxonomic Assumption? • Mutual Exclusivity?

  31. Whole Event Assumption • Unlikely • Agentive manner/action  outcome > instrument > agent • Event parsing/representation is crucial

  32. Taxonomic Assumption • What is event taxonomy? • Basic-level verbs? • WordNet (Miller & Felbaum, 1991)

  33. Mutual exclusivity • Fast-mapping of verbs in 3-year-olds • Effect size is smaller

  34. Role of Syntax General syntax-semantics links Tendency of object label interpretation with a noun and action interpretation with a verb (Brown 1957) BUT: How does the child know the grammatical category of a word?

  35. Syntax and verb meanings Syntactic bootstrapping (Gleitman) Syntax narrows down possible hypothesis about verb meaning

  36. He is daxing He is daxing it. He is daxing to her. He is daxing from her.

  37. Naigles (1990)

  38. Problems with syntactic bootstrapping research Infinite hypothesis space reduced by 15 times is still infinite Confound of semantics and syntax Requires syntactic knowledge

  39. Role of Social and Pragmatic Cues Joint attention Referential intent Case of autism

  40. Summary Multiple sources of information are needed in word mapping. Constraints are “default principles” that can be overridden given appropriate circumstances. Research should move beyond nouns.

  41. Discussion questions Is there ordering of constraints? How are event nouns learned? (e.g., party, bath, trip) How are dual category words learned? Do nouns have to be learned before verbs are?

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