Infants' reliance on a social criterion for establishing word-object relations

被引:107
作者
Baldwin, DA
Markman, EM
Bill, B
Desjardins, N
Irwin, JM
Tidball, G
机构
[1] STANFORD UNIV,STANFORD,CA 94305
[2] UNIV BRITISH COLUMBIA,VANCOUVER,BC V5Z 1M9,CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.2307/1131771
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
The language children hear presents them with a multitude of co-occurrences between words and things in the world, and they must repeatedly determine which among these manifold co-occurrences is relevant. Social factors-such as cues regarding the speaker's referential intent-might serve as one guide to whether word-object covariation should be registered. In 2 studies, infants (15-20 months and 18-20 months in Studies 1 and 2, respectively) heard novel labels at a time when they were investigating a single novel object; in one case the label was uttered by a speaker seated within the infant's view and displaying concurrent attention to the novel toy (coupled condition), whereas in the other case the label emanated from a speaker seated out of the infant's view (decoupled condition). In both studies, subsequent comprehension questions indicated that infants of 18-20 months registered a stable link between label and object in the coupled condition, but not in the decoupled condition, despite the fact that covariation between label and object was equivalent in the 2 conditions. Thus, by 18-20 months children are inclined to establish a mapping between word and object only when a speaker displays signs of referring to that object.
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页码:3135 / 3153
页数:19
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