Nature and origins of the lexicon in 6-mo-olds.
Abstract
Recent research reported the surprising finding that even 6-mo-olds understand common
nouns [Bergelson E, Swingley D (2012) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 109:3253-3258]. However,
is their early lexicon structured and acquired like older learners? We test 6-mo-olds
for a hallmark of the mature lexicon: cross-word relations. We also examine whether
properties of the home environment that have been linked with lexical knowledge in
older children are detectable in the initial stage of comprehension. We use a new
dataset, which includes in-lab comprehension and home measures from the same infants.
We find evidence for cross-word structure: On seeing two images of common nouns, infants
looked significantly more at named target images when the competitor images were semantically
unrelated (e.g., milk and foot) than when they were related (e.g., milk and juice),
just as older learners do. We further find initial evidence for home-lab links: common
noun "copresence" (i.e., whether words' referents were present and attended to in
home recordings) correlated with in-lab comprehension. These findings suggest that,
even in neophyte word learners, cross-word relations are formed early and the home
learning environment measurably helps shape the lexicon from the outset.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15792Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1073/pnas.1712966114Publication Info
Bergelson, Elika; & Aslin, Richard N (2017). Nature and origins of the lexicon in 6-mo-olds. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 10.1073/pnas.1712966114. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15792.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Elika Bergelson
Crandall Family Assistant Professor
Dr. Bergelson accepts PhD applicants through the Developmental and Cog/CogNeuro areas
of P&N and the CNAP program.In my research, I try to understand the interplay of processes
during language acquisition. In particular, I am interested in how word learning relates
to other aspects of learning language (e.g. speech sound acquisition, grammar/morphology
learning), and social/cognitive development more broadly (e.g. joint attention processes)
in the first few

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