Word Learning Flashcards

1
Q

Protowords

A

Sounds used consistently by children with consistent meaning but which bear no resemblance to conventional words

Parent understands it, ritualized

Can be gestures at first, then sounds plus gestures, then just sounds

Not referential, but interactional (word must “stand for” the referent, not just “go with” them)

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2
Q

Protolanguage

Halliday’s Four distinct acts of meaning

A

Instrumental – request an object
Regulatory – request an action
Interactional – social context
Personal – share interest

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3
Q

The mapping (“gavagai”) problem

A

What exactly is the word referring to?

How large or small is the category?

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4
Q

Underextension Error

A

A child infers that a word belong to too small a group of things

Context-specific words

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5
Q

Overextension Error

A

A child infers that a word belong to too large a group of things

The property of this category is X, so everything that is X belongs in this category

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6
Q

Patterners

A

Interested in building, knowing how things work, objects, discovering

More interested in things

Have more referential words at 50 words

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7
Q

Dramatists

A

Interested in reproducing adult social reality

More interested in people

Have more expressive words at 50 words

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8
Q

Why is there a word spurt at 50 words?

Nativist, Behaviorist, Constructivist Explanations

A

Nativist

Onset of the innate word-learning constraints

Behaviorist

All words are learned in parallel but some are easy to learn and others are hard. Just statistical.

Constructivist

Advances in the child’s understanding of the world and of the nature of words (and how they can be grouped into categories)

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9
Q

(Nativist) Word learning constraints

3 Terms

A

According to the lexical constraint theory, children are able to figure out the correct meaning of words because they are born with innate knowledge that allows them to constrain the space of the possible meanings of words.

Whole Object Assumption

Mutual Exclusivity Assumption

Taxonomic Assumption

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10
Q

Whole Object Assumption

A

Proposes that when children hear a word, they assume it refers to the whole word.

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11
Q

Mutual Exclusivity Assumption

A

Proposes that children assume that different words refer to different things.

Objects and concepts have a single word to refer to them

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12
Q

Taxonomic Assumption

A

Proposes that children assume that words refer to thing that are of the same kind, and so are used to categorize things

If a researcher used a name (“This is a sud. Fund the other sud”) vs. a vague “Find something like this,” the kid points to another categorically related picture (another dog, for instance)

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13
Q

Behaviorist word learning constraints

A

The innate constraints could also be learned

Blocking

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14
Q

Constructivist word learning constraints

A

Principle of conventionality

Principle of Contrast

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15
Q

Principle of conventionality

A

Words cannot be made up; they must be shared by the community

(language is a set of mostly arbitrary conventions)

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16
Q

Principle of Contrast

A

Different words have different meanings

17
Q

Study: Do children understand the conventionality of words?

A

Graham, Stock, and Henderson

19 month olds
Tells kids that they are looking through a box for a “mido”
Picks something up, says “oh!”
Kids subsequently identify that object as a mido, regardless of whether the same person asks them or not

Suggests that kids know that words generalize across people

18
Q

Composition of kid’s early vocabulary

(3 types and definitions)

A

Context-bound/context-specific
If the context is changed, the kid will not use the word anymore

Nominal
Referential, noun-like words
Used flexibly, across situations

Non-nominal
Not a noun
Used flexibly, across situations

19
Q

How does a word become context-bound?

A

If it is only used in one way by the caregiver

A study showed that mothers did use the words out of the context that the kids use them, but most kids use the meaning most frequently used by the mother

20
Q

Classical Conditioning

A

Unconditioned Stimulus
Unconditioned Response
Conditioned Stimulus
Conditioned Response

Dog – bell to salivation (presence of food)

Bunny - tone to blink (eye air puff)

21
Q

Word learning as classical conditioning

A

Hear the word cat to a mental representation of a cat (whether or not the cat is present)

22
Q

Blocking in classical conditioning

A

The learned response inhibits other responses

If a rabbit is trained first with a tone, can’t learn a new stimulus, such as a light flash

23
Q

Social-pragmatic accounts of word learning

A

Word learning is born out of the child’s understanding of the world and other minds

Joint Attention

Common Ground

24
Q

Joint Attention

A

Said to exist when two individuals are both attending to an object and when they are aware that the other is attending to it

25
Q

Conversation as joint action

A

Language is used to get things done

Involves many individual actions

Ultimately a joint, collaborative action - cooperative

26
Q

Study: Do children pay attention to joint attention and common ground?

A

Tomasello

Experiment 1:
12 month old played with two toys with an adult that left the room
Child played with third toy with second adult
When first adult returned, adult said, “wow, give me that!”
Child handed object three

Child know from common ground that adult would not be excited about toy one and two

Experiment 2:
Same study, but just watched adult play with the two toys
When they came back in, child would hand them anything

Joint attention is necessary for common ground

27
Q

Behaviorist view of word learning

A

Kids have a novelty bias

They assume the other person is referring to something novel or something that stands out (to the kid)

Don’t need any knowledge of other minds