Department of Educational Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA; Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA; Department of Psychology, University of Vienna, Vienna, 1010, Austria.
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA; Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2022 Sep;221:105449. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2022.105449. Epub 2022 May 10.
Children's early language knowledge-typically assessed using standardized word comprehension tests or through parental reports-has been positively linked to a variety of later outcomes, from reasoning tests to academic performance to income and health. To better understand the mechanisms behind these links, we examined whether knowledge of certain "seed words"-words with high inductive potential-is positively associated with inductive reasoning. This hypothesis stems from prior work on the effects of language on categorization suggesting that certain words may be important for helping people to deploy categorical hypotheses. Using a longitudinal design, we assessed 36 2- to 4-year-old children's knowledge of 333 words of varying levels of generality (e.g., toy vs. pinwheel, number vs. five). We predicted that adjusting for overall vocabulary, knowledge of more general words (e.g., toy, number) would predict children's performance on inductive reasoning tasks administered 6 months later (i.e., a subset of the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales for Early Childhood-Fifth Edition [SB-5] and Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Cognitive Abilities [WJ] concept formation tasks). This prediction was confirmed for one of the measures of inductive reasoning (i.e., the SB-5 but not the WJ) and notably for the task considered to be less reliant on language. Although our experimental design demonstrates only a correlational relationship between seed word knowledge and inductive reasoning ability, our results are consistent with the possibility that early knowledge of certain seed words facilitates performance on putatively nonverbal reasoning tasks.
儿童早期的语言知识——通常通过标准化的词汇理解测试或通过父母报告来评估——与各种后期结果相关,从推理测试到学业成绩到收入和健康。为了更好地理解这些联系背后的机制,我们研究了特定“种子词汇”(具有高归纳潜力的词汇)的知识是否与归纳推理呈正相关。这个假设源于语言对分类的影响的先前研究,表明某些词汇可能对帮助人们部署类别假设很重要。我们使用纵向设计,评估了 36 名 2 至 4 岁儿童对 333 个词汇的知识,这些词汇的一般性程度不同(例如,玩具与风车,数字与五)。我们预测,在调整整体词汇量后,更通用词汇(例如,玩具,数字)的知识将预测儿童在 6 个月后进行的归纳推理任务中的表现(即斯坦福 - 比内特智力测验早期儿童第五版 [SB-5]和伍兹克 - 约翰逊认知能力测验 [WJ]概念形成任务的子集)。这一预测得到了归纳推理衡量标准之一(即 SB-5,但不是 WJ)的证实,尤其是对于被认为不太依赖语言的任务。尽管我们的实验设计仅证明了种子词汇知识和归纳推理能力之间的相关关系,但我们的结果与某些种子词汇的早期知识促进假设的非语言推理任务表现的可能性一致。