A bottom-up view of toddler word learning
Pereira, Alfredo F.
;Smith, Linda B.
;Yu, Chen
Artigo de Jornal
"Published online: 28 June 2013"
A head camera was used to examine the visual correlates of object name learning by toddlers as they played with novel objects and as the parent spontaneously named those objects. The toddlers’ learning of the object names was tested after play, and the visual properties of the head camera images during naming events associated with learned and unlearned object names were analyzed. Naming events asso- ciated with learning had a clear visual signature, one in which the visual information itself was clean and visual competition among objects was minimized. Moreover, for learned object names, the visual advantage of the named target over competitors was sustained, both before and after the heard name. The findings are discussed in terms of the visual and cognitive processes that may depend on clean sensory input for learning and also on the sensory–motor, cognitive, and social processes that may create these optimal visual moments for learning.
National Science Foundation Grant 0924248, AFOSR FA9550-09-1-0665, NICHHD grant R01HD 28675
Portuguese Ministry of Education and Science Postdoctoral fellowship SFRH/BPD/70122/2010