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Categorial creativity as evidence for a categoryless start

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Title: Categorial creativity as evidence for a categoryless start


1
Categorial creativity as evidence for a
category-less start

Marian Erkelens International Association for
the Study of Child Language - Berlin, 28 July 2005

2
Categories lexical vs. syntactic
  • Lexical categories
  • Connection with the lexicon?
  • Major categories
  • Categories like Verb, Noun, Adjective
    categorizing content words in a language, not
    necessarily in the lexicon.

3
Outline
  • Category acquisition a possible developmental
    path
  • Dutch child language data on categorial
    creativity
  • Conclusions / further research

4
Major categories are syntactic
  • Lexical items have defining syntactic
    possibilities
  • Verbs predicate
  • Nouns head of an argument phrase
  • Adjectives modifier of arguments
  • Semantic properties are consequential

5
Research Question
  • How do Dutch children learn to make correct
    combinations of lexical items and categories?

6
Developmental path
  • Category independent of lexical items
  • (cf. Marantz, 1997 Borer, 2003).
  • 2. Input provides syntactic environment
  • (cf. Syntactic Bootstrapping Gleitman, 1990).
  • 3. Lexical items used in the categorial context
    from the input.

7
Problems for this path
  • Conversion
  • fietsV je mee? will you bike with me?
  • wil je een fietsN hebben? do you want a bike?
  • Children might want to express things for which
    they have not heard a lexical item.
  • lexical gap in adult language or the childs own
    language

8
Predictions for creativity
  • Creative use of lexical items that occur in
    multiple categories in their input.
  • Creative use of lexical items in case of lexical
    gap (either in adult language or in childs own
    language)

9
Method
  • Four Dutch children from CHILDES
  • Matthijs and Tomas (Wijnen, 1993)
  • Laura and Sarah (Van Kampen, 1997)
  • Analysis of creative uses between 26 and 36

10
Results
  • All children used some lexical items occasionally
    in syntactic categories in which adults cannot
    use them (creatives).
  • Matthijs 11 creatives, Tomas 3 creatives,
    Laura 5 creatives, Sarah 3 creatives

11
Examples
  • V N
  • dit is het tafeldek this is the lay-table
    (Matthijs)
  • A N
  • is (ee)n heel mooi? is a very beautiful?
    (Tomas)
  • N V
  • ikke wil zalve I want ointment-INF (Laura)
  • A V
  • neusje viest Nosie dirty-3SG (Sarah)

12
Analysis first prediction
  • Of the 22 creative uses, only 7 are multiple
    category items in adult Dutch.
  • Adult veegN wipe / veegV to sweep
  • Matthijs een veegN ! a brush
  • Children do not only use multiple category items
    creatively.

13
Analysis second prediction
  • Lexical gaps in adult language
  • to put on ointment, to walk sideways
  • Lexical gaps in their own language
  • head-phone, table cloth
  • ...but not only with lexical gaps
  • speedway, brush

14
Conclusions
  • Children do not restrict their categorial
    creativity to items that are flexible in adult
    language.
  • Children do not only produce creative uses if the
    appropriate lexical item is not available.
  • Syntactic categories are independent of the
    lexical items in early development at least the
    start of lexical development is category-less.

15
Further research
  • What other strategies might lead children to
    correct syntactic categorial possibilities of
    words?
  • What role does syntactic computation play
    vis-a-vis lexical retrieval?
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