Samuelson Larissa K, Horst Jessica S, Schutte Anne R, Dobbertin Brandi N
Department of Psychology and Iowa Center for Developmental and Learning Sciences, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.
J Child Lang. 2008 Aug;35(3):559-89. doi: 10.1017/S0305000908008672.
Young children learning English are biased to attend to the shape of solid rigid objects when learning novel names. This study seeks further understanding of the processes that support this behavior by examining a previous finding that three-year-old children are also biased to generalize novel names for objects made from deformable materials by shape, even after the materials are made salient. In two experiments, we examined the noun generalizations of 72 two-, three- and four-year-old children with rigid and deformable stimuli. Data reveal that three-year-old, but not two- or four-year-old, children generalize names for deformable things by shape, and that this behavior is not due to the syntactic context of the task. We suggest this behavior is an overgeneralization of three-year-old children's knowledge of how rigid things are named and discuss the implications of this finding for a developmental account of the origins of the shape bias.
学习英语的幼儿在学习新名称时倾向于关注固体刚性物体的形状。本研究通过考察之前的一项发现来进一步了解支持这种行为的过程,该发现表明,即使在材料变得显著之后,三岁儿童也倾向于根据形状对由可变形材料制成的物体进行新名称的泛化。在两个实验中,我们用刚性和可变形刺激物考察了72名两岁、三岁和四岁儿童的名词泛化情况。数据显示,三岁儿童(而非两岁或四岁儿童)会根据形状对可变形物体进行名称泛化,并且这种行为并非源于任务的句法语境。我们认为这种行为是三岁儿童对刚性物体命名方式的过度泛化,并讨论了这一发现对形状偏差起源的发展性解释的意义。