Lecture 3 - Lexical Development Flashcards

1
Q

What are naturalistic observations?

A
  • Children in their natural settings and what they are doing
  • Via diaries or play sessions (can be structured)
  • Can map children against each other off age
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2
Q

What do you hear as infants age in naturalistic studies?

A
  • 6 months: Babbling
  • 1 Year: first words = referring to particular objects
  • 18 months: Two-word utterances
  • 2 years: Telegraphic speech: nouns present but verbs not
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3
Q

What are the limitations of naturalistic studies?

A
  • Are you capturing what the child actually knows (in 10 min playtime)
  • Generalisable to all children?
  • Observer bias
  • Lack of control
  • Subjectivity in coding behaviour
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4
Q

What is CDI?

A
  • Type of parental report
  • Communicative Development Inventory
  • Method that reports on receptive and expressive vocabulary
  • List given, can child understand the word? Can they say the world and understand it?
  • Expressive language (saying) is exponential
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5
Q

When does language acquisition stop?

A
  • Does not
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6
Q

Describe preferential looking

A
  • 2 pics on screen and label for one of them
  • Does child orient themselves to referent word is placed
  • Looking behaviour is a proxy measure
  • Looking behaviour is consistent with association between label and picture
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7
Q

Why is there a period before 0 when neither picture is there? (In preferential looking)

A
  • Ensure they are not already preferential looking e.g kid could like bananas
  • Gives baseline
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8
Q

Describe vocabulary growth

A
  • Gradual growth before a vocab spurt where they acquire vocab at a faster pace.
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9
Q

What is the referential ambiguity problem? (Gavagai)

A
  • Under-extensions: word under applied e.g kitten is only for your kitten, but not the neighbours or the strays
  • Over-extensions: when word is over applied e.g any four legged things are dogs
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10
Q

How do you solve the referential ambiguity problem?

A
  • Joint attention: label everything
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11
Q

What are constraints of the referential ambiguity problem?

A
  • Tend to go for whole objects rather than bits of objects e.g rabbits rather than rabbit ears
  • Mutual exclusivity: if you know something, the other thing must be the new word as you would not double-label a word.
  • Taxonomy: thinking of concepts rather than specific things
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12
Q

What are new areas of research?

A
  • Development is active and embodied & tools to study this
  • Developmental experience is structured e.g plotting where diff words are said in the house. Certain words = spaces/times/other words
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