Au T K
Department of Psychology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912.
J Child Lang. 1990 Jun;17(2):393-416. doi: 10.1017/s0305000900013830.
Whenever children hear a novel word, the context supplies information about its meaning. One way children may cope with so much information is to use whatever seems to make sense, given their prior knowledge and beliefs, while ignoring or quickly forgetting the rest. This work examined if and how children's beliefs about word meanings may affect their use of contrastive linguistic information in the input in word learning. In Study 1, some 3- and 4-year-olds were introduced to a novel material or shape name and heard it contrasted with familiar words. Others merely heard the novel word used for referring to an object. These children were then tested to determine what they had learned about their new word meaning. In Study 2, another group of 3- and 4-year-olds were asked to name the materials and shapes used for introducing these novel terms. Children made use of linguistic contrast only in some situations. They benefited more when the novel term did not overlap much in denotation with any terms commonly known by 3- and 4-year-olds. These results suggest that children can use information in the input very efficiently in learning a term for an as-yet-unnamed category, but not in learning a term similar in denotation to a word they already know. Thus, the results are consistent with the claim that children believe every word has a unique denotation.
每当儿童听到一个新单词时,语境会提供有关其含义的信息。儿童应对如此多信息的一种方式是,根据他们先前的知识和信念,采用任何看起来合理的信息,而忽略或快速忘记其余信息。这项研究探讨了儿童对单词含义的信念是否以及如何影响他们在单词学习中对输入中对比性语言信息的使用。在研究1中,一些3岁和4岁的儿童被介绍了一个新的材料或形状名称,并听到它与熟悉的单词形成对比。其他儿童只听到了用于指代物体的新单词。然后对这些儿童进行测试,以确定他们对新单词含义的学习情况。在研究2中,另一组3岁和4岁的儿童被要求说出用于介绍这些新术语的材料和形状。儿童仅在某些情况下利用语言对比。当新术语在指称上与3岁和4岁儿童通常知道的任何术语重叠不多时会更受益。这些结果表明,儿童在学习一个尚未命名的类别的术语时可以非常有效地利用输入中的信息,但在学习一个指称与他们已经知道的单词相似的术语时则不然。因此,这些结果与儿童认为每个单词都有独特指称的观点一致。