Steil Jessica N, Friedrich Claudia K, Schild Ulrike
Department of Psychology, Eberhard Karls University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2021 Oct 6;12:718742. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.718742. eCollection 2021.
Work with the looking-while-listening (LWL-) paradigm suggested that 6-month-old English-learning infants associated several labels for common nouns with pictures of their referents: While one distractor picture was present, infants systematically fixated the named target picture. However, recent work revealed constraints of infants' noun comprehension. The age at which these abilities can be obtained appears to relate to the infants' familiarity with the talker, the target language, and word frequency differences in target-distractor pairs. Here, we present further data to this newly established field of research. We tested 42 monolingual German-learning infants aged 6-14 months by means of the LWL-paradigm. Infants saw two pictures side-by-side on a screen, whilst an unfamiliar male talker named one of both. Overall, infants did not fixate the target picture more than the distractor picture. In line with previous results, infants' performance on the task was higher when target and distractor differed within their word frequency-as operationalized by the parental rating of word exposure. Together, our results add further evidence for constraints on early word learning. They point to cross-linguistic differences in early word learning and strengthen the view that infants might use extra-linguistic cues within the stimulus pairing, such as frequency imbalance, to disambiguate between two potential referents.
采用边听边看(LWL-)范式的研究表明,6个月大的英语学习婴儿能将几个普通名词的标签与其所指对象的图片联系起来:当出现一张干扰图片时,婴儿会系统性地注视被命名的目标图片。然而,最近的研究揭示了婴儿名词理解能力的局限性。获得这些能力的年龄似乎与婴儿对说话者、目标语言的熟悉程度以及目标-干扰项对中的词频差异有关。在此,我们为这个新建立的研究领域提供更多数据。我们通过LWL-范式对42名6至14个月大的单语德语学习婴儿进行了测试。婴儿在屏幕上并排看到两张图片,同时一名陌生男性说话者说出其中一张图片的名称。总体而言,婴儿对目标图片的注视并不比对干扰图片的注视更多。与之前的结果一致,当目标词和干扰词在词频上存在差异时(通过父母对词汇接触的评分来衡量),婴儿在任务中的表现会更好。总之,我们的结果为早期词汇学习的局限性提供了进一步的证据。它们指出了早期词汇学习中的跨语言差异,并强化了这样一种观点,即婴儿可能会利用刺激配对中的非语言线索,如频率不平衡,来区分两个潜在的所指对象。