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Cited 16 time in webofscience Cited 16 time in scopus
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An Associative Account of The Development of Word Learning

Authors
Sloutsky, Vladimir M.Yim, HyungwookYao, XinDennis, Simon
Issue Date
Sep-2017
Publisher
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
Keywords
Word learning; Cognitive development; Semantic development
Citation
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, v.97, pp.1 - 30
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Volume
97
Start Page
1
End Page
30
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/33018
DOI
10.1016/j.cogpsych.2017.06.001
ISSN
0010-0285
Abstract
Word learning is a notoriously difficult induction problem because meaning is underdetermined by positive examples. How do children solve this problem? Some have argued that word learning is achieved by means of inference: young word learners rely on a number of assumptions that reduce the overall hypothesis space by favoring some meanings over others. However, these approaches have difficulty explaining how words are learned from conversations or text, without pointing or explicit instruction. In this research, we propose an associative mechanism that can account for such learning. In a series of experiments, 4-year-olds and adults were presented with sets of words that included a single nonsense word (e.g. dax). Some lists were taxonomic (i.,e., all items were members of a given category), some were associative (i.e., all items were associates of a given category, but not members), and some were mixed. Participants were asked to indicate whether the nonsense word was an animal or an artifact. Adults exhibited evidence of learning when lists consisted of either associatively or taxonomically related items. In contrast, children exhibited evidence of word learning only when lists consisted of associatively related items. These results present challenges to several extant models of word learning, and a new model based on the distinction between syntagmatic and paradigmatic associations is proposed.
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COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING (서울 심리뇌과학전공)
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