Fast Mapping Skills in the Developing Lexicon
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Purpose: This preliminary investigation was a longitudinal study of fast mapping skills in normally developing children, 16-18 months of age. The purpose was to examine the effects of practice on the accessibility of words in lexical memory.
Method: Eight children were taught the names of 24 unfamiliar objects over 12 weekly training sessions. The amount of practice children had with individual words varied as a function of session. Data were compared to a control group of children-matched on productive vocabulary-who were exposed to the same experimental words at the first and last sessions only.
Results: The results showed that for children in the experimental group, extended practice with a novel set of high-practice words led to the rapid acquisition of a second set of low-practice words. Children in the control group did not show the same lexical advantage.
Conclusions: The data suggest that learning some words primes the system to learn more words. Vocabulary development can thus be conceptualized as a continual process of fine-tuning the lexical system to enable increased accessibility to information. Implications for the treatment of children with word-finding difficulties are considered.
Infants exploit vowels to label objects and actions from continuous audiovisual stimuli.
Jara C, Moenne-Loccoz C, Pena M Sci Rep. 2021; 11(1):10982.
PMID: 34040052 PMC: 8154951. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90326-z.
Stille C, Bekolay T, Blouw P, Kroger B Front Psychol. 2020; 11:1594.
PMID: 32774315 PMC: 7381331. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01594.
Iverson J, Northrup J, Leezenbaum N, Parlade M, Koterba E, L West K J Autism Dev Disord. 2017; 48(1):55-71.
PMID: 28900778 PMC: 5831718. DOI: 10.1007/s10803-017-3297-8.
Rohlfing K, Nachtigaller K Front Psychol. 2016; 7:961.
PMID: 27471479 PMC: 4945648. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00961.
An Alternative to Mapping a Word onto a Concept in Language Acquisition: Pragmatic Frames.
Rohlfing K, Wrede B, Vollmer A, Oudeyer P Front Psychol. 2016; 7:470.
PMID: 27148105 PMC: 4835869. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00470.