Kersten Alan W, Smith Linda B
Department of Psychology, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton 33431-0991, USA.
Child Dev. 2002 Jan-Feb;73(1):93-109. doi: 10.1111/1467-8624.00394.
Three experiments provided evidence that 3.5- to 4-year-old English-speaking children (N = 72) attend to the appearances of novel objects, not only when they hear a novel noun, but also when they hear a novel verb. Children learning nouns in the context of novel, moving objects attended exclusively to the appearances of objects, even though nouns were also related to the motions of those objects. Children learning verbs attended equally to the appearances of objects and their motions. The latter result contrasted with the results from adults (N = 20), who focused more strongly on motions than on the appearances of objects when learning verbs. When familiar objects were instead employed, child verb learners attended more to motions than to the appearances of objects. Children may attend to novel objects during verb learning because knowledge of an object may be prerequisite to understanding what a verb means in the context of that object.
三项实验提供了证据,表明3.5至4岁的说英语儿童(N = 72)不仅在听到新名词时,而且在听到新动词时,都会关注新物体的外观。在新的移动物体情境中学习名词的儿童只关注物体的外观,尽管名词也与这些物体的运动有关。学习动词的儿童对物体的外观及其运动给予同等关注。后一结果与成人(N = 20)的结果形成对比,成人在学习动词时更关注运动而非物体外观。当使用熟悉的物体时,学习动词的儿童更多地关注运动而非物体外观。儿童在动词学习过程中可能会关注新物体,因为了解物体可能是理解该物体情境中动词含义的先决条件。