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The Influence of Perceptual Salience on Vocabulary Acquisition

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Title: The Influence of Perceptual Salience on Vocabulary Acquisition


1
The Influence of Perceptual Salience on
Vocabulary Acquisition Judith Goodman, PhD,
Michelle Clark, Kathryn Brady Department of
Communication Science Disorders University of
Missouri-Columbia
  • Background
  • Children exposed to English learn a
    disproportionately high number of nouns.
  • One factor influencing this noun bias may be
    salience of nouns in the input (Nelson, 1973
    Gentner, 1982 Bornstein Cote, 2004).
  • One property that contributes to noun salience is
    their frequent occurrence in utterance-final
    position (Gentner, 1982 Slobin, 1970).
  • Less is known about how words from other
    syntactic categories are used in speech to
    children. It is possible that they are also
    highlighted.
  • Children exposed to Subject-Object-Verb languages
    such as Mandarin do not show a noun bias. This
    may be, in part, due to the utterance-final
    position of verbs (Tardif, T., Gelman, S. A.,
    Xu, F., 1999 Tardif, T., Shatz, M Naigles, L.,
    1997)
  • Examining the way in which words from different
    syntactic categories are used in language input
    may help us to understand the role of perceptual
    salience in word learning.
  • Results
  • TNs occurred overwhelmingly in salient
    positions (isolation and sentence final) (97).
  • TVs also occurred in salient positions
    (isolation, final position, and penultimate
    position followed by a pronoun) far more often
    than expected (81).
  • Stimuli
  • Six novel objects
  • Six novel actions performed on the target
    objects
  • Each target object and target action was
    assigned a novel label.
  • The stimulus set is presented in Table 1, with
    examples of the
  • objects in Figure 1.

Figure 2 Target Noun Presentations
Table 1 Target nouns and verbs
Figure 1 Examples of novel objects
Figure 3 Target Verb Presentations
Isolation 55
  • Purpose
  • These data come from a larger study of the role
    of syntactic category and phonology on word
    learning.
  • The language used by the examiner during the
    presentation of novel words suggested that verbs,
    as well as nouns, might be perceptually salient.
    In this poster, we systematically investigated
    that possibility. We sought to
  • Replicate previous work by confirming that nouns
    tend to occur in perceptually salient positions.
  • Extend previous work by investigating whether
    verbs also occur in perceptually salient
    positions.
  • How often do verbs occur in utterance-final
    position?
  • If verbs occur in medial position, are they
    followed by a full noun phrase or just a pronoun?
  • How often do verbs occur in isolation?

Followed by Pronoun 16
Bic
Wug
Vlad
Final Position 10
  • Procedure
  • Children visited the lab bimonthly for hour-long
    sessions
  • In each session, the examiner
  • presented each target object and labeled it six
    times with a novel target noun (TN)
  • demonstrated each action and labeled it six times
    with a novel target verb (TV)
  • The examiner was given no instructions concerning
    what syntactic frames to use the novel words in.

Medial Position 9
Initial Position 10
  • Conclusion
  • As expected, nouns almost always occurred in
    final position, a salient position that may
    facilitate word learning.
  • Verbs also occurred in perceptually salient
    positions.
  • Verbs were typically presented in isolation,
    final position and penultimate position followed
    by a pronoun.
  • Despite the Subject-Verb-Object structure of
    English, verbs were rarely followed by full noun
    phrases.
  • In the word learning study from which these data
    were gathered, children learned verbs as readily
    as nouns. We hypothesize that perceptual
    salience facilitated learning of both nouns and
    verbs.
  • Our next step will be to code the language
    parents use with their children to analyze the
    perceptual salience of verbs in spontaneous
    speech.
  • Coding
  • We coded the syntactic frames in which the novel
    words occurred (e.g., Look at the bic was coded
    verb-preposition-TN).
  • Syntactic categories used to describe the
    syntactic frames are presented in Table 2.
  • For each session, we tallied the number of times
    a specific syntactic frame was used.

Table 2 Syntactic Categories
  • Method
  • Participants
  • 12 Children
  • 5 males and 7 females
  • Participated from 12 to 30 months of age.
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