Ji Yue, Papafragou Anna
Department of English, School of Foreign Languages, Beijing Institute of Technology.
Department of Linguistics, University of Pennsylvania.
Dev Psychol. 2024 Aug;60(8):1457-1473. doi: 10.1037/dev0001782. Epub 2024 Jul 8.
Natural languages distinguish between telic predicates that denote events leading to an inherent endpoint (e.g., ) and atelic predicates that denote events with no inherent endpoint (e.g., ). Telicity distinctions in many languages are already partly available to 4-5-year-olds. Here, using exclusively nonlinguistic tasks and a sample of English-speaking children, we ask whether young learners use corresponding temporal notions to characterize event structure-that is, whether children represent events in cognition as temporal entities with a specified endpoint or temporal units that could in principle extend indefinitely. We find that 4-5-year-old children in our sample compute boundedness during an event categorization task (Experiment 1) and distinguish event boundedness from event completion (Experiment 2). Furthermore, 4-5-year-olds in our sample evaluate interruptions at event endpoints versus midpoints differently-but only for events that are construed as bounded, presumably because in such construals, events truly culminate (Experiment 3). We conclude that young children represent events in terms of foundational and abstract temporal properties. These properties could support the acquisition of linguistic aspectual distinctions and further scaffold the way children conceptualize and process their dynamic experiences. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
自然语言区分表示导致固有终点的事件的有界谓词(例如,)和表示没有固有终点的事件的无界谓词(例如,)。许多语言中的有界性区分在4至5岁的儿童中已经部分存在。在此,我们仅使用非语言任务并以说英语的儿童为样本,询问年幼的学习者是否使用相应的时间概念来表征事件结构——也就是说,儿童在认知中是否将事件表征为具有特定终点的时间实体或原则上可以无限延伸的时间单位。我们发现,我们样本中的4至5岁儿童在事件分类任务中计算有界性(实验1),并区分事件有界性和事件完成情况(实验2)。此外,我们样本中的4至5岁儿童对事件终点与中点处的中断的评估有所不同——但仅限于被视为有界的事件,大概是因为在这种理解中,事件真正达到顶点(实验3)。我们得出结论,幼儿根据基本的和抽象的时间属性来表征事件。这些属性可以支持语言体貌区分的习得,并进一步为儿童概念化和处理其动态体验的方式提供支撑。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2024美国心理学会,保留所有权利)