Bültmann & Gerriets
Flexibility in Early Verb Use
Evidence from a Multiple-N Diary Study
von Letitia R Naigles, Erika Hoff, Donna Vea
Kommentar: Michael Tomasello, Silke Brandt, Sandra R Waxman, Jane B Childers
Verlag: Wiley
Reihe: Monographs of the Society for Nr. 293
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-4443-3357-2
Erschienen am 01.09.2009
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 226 mm [H] x 150 mm [B] x 10 mm [T]
Gewicht: 204 Gramm
Umfang: 300 Seiten

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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung

Flexibility and productivity are hallmarks of human language use. Competent speakers have the capacity to use the words they know to serve a variety of communicative functions, to refer to new and varied exemplars of the categories to which words refer, and in new and varied combinations with other words. When and how children achieve this flexibility--and when they are truly productive language users--are central issues among accounts of language acquisition. The current study tests competing hypotheses of the achievement of flexibility and some kinds of productivity against data on children's first uses of their first-acquired verbs.

Eight mothers recorded their children's first 10 uses of 34 early-acquired verbs, if those verbs were produced within the window of the study. The children were between 16 and 20 months when the study began (depending on when the children started to produce verbs), were followed for between 3 and 12 months, and produced between 13 and 31 of the target verbs. These diary records provided the basis for a description of the pragmatic, semantic, and syntactic properties of early verb use. The data revealed that within this early, initial period of verb use, children use their verbs both to command and describe, they use their verbs in reference to a variety of appropriate actions enacted by a variety of actors and with a variety of affected objects, and they use their verbs in a variety of syntactic structures. All 8 children displayed semantic and grammatical flexibility before 24 months of age. These findings are more consistent with a model of the language learning child as an avid generalizer than as a conservative language user. Children's early verb use suggests abilities and inclinations to abstract from experience that may indeed begin in infancy.



Letitia R. Naigles (Ph.D. 1988, University of Pennsylvania) is Professor of Psychology at the University of Connecticut. Her research investigates the processes of language acquisition in children with autism and compares language development across languages and cultures.

Erika Hoff (Ph.D. 1981, University of Michigan) is Professor of Psychology at Florida Atlantic University. Her research investigates the role of input in early language development and the relation of phonological memory to early lexical development in monolingual and bilingual children.


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