Children’s quantification with every over time

This article looks closely at two types of errors children have been shown to make with universal quantification—Exhaustive Pairing (EP) errors and Underexhaustive errors—and asks whether they reflect the same underlying phenomenon. In a large-scale, longitudinal study, 140 children were tested 4 times from ages 4 to 7 on sentences involving the universal quantifier every . We find an interesting inverse relationship between EP errors and Underexhaustive errors over development: the point at which children stop making Underexhaustive errors is also when they begin making EP errors. Underexhaustive errors, common at early stages in our study, may be indicative of a non-adult, non-exhaustive semantics for every . EP errors, which emerge later, and remain frequent even at age 7, are progressive in nature and were also found with adults in a control study. Following recent developmental work (Drozd and van Loosbroek 2006; Smits 2010), we suggest that these errors do not signal lack of knowledge, but may stem from independent difficulties appropriately restricting the quantifier domain in the presence of a salient, but irrelevant, extra object. This article is part of the special collection: Acquisition of Quantification

[1]  Marcia Barnes,et al.  Enhancing early child care quality and learning for toddlers at risk: the responsive early childhood program. , 2014, Developmental psychology.

[2]  William Churchill Houston Philip Event quantification in the acquisition of universal quantification , 1995 .

[3]  William Philip,et al.  Acquiring Knowledge of Universal Quantification , 2011 .

[4]  Dag Westerståhl,et al.  Determiners and Context Sets , 1985 .

[5]  Tanja Heizmann Current issues in first language acquisition , 2006 .

[6]  Joseph K. Torgesen,et al.  Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing , 1997 .

[7]  J. Arena,et al.  Expressive one-word picture vocabulary test , 1984 .

[8]  Jill de Villiers,et al.  Handbook of Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition , 2011 .

[9]  S. Kuczaj,et al.  Language Development, I: Syntax and Semantics , 1983 .

[10]  ScienceOpen Admin Glossa: a journal of general linguistics , 2018 .

[11]  B. Geurts Quantifying Kids , 2003 .

[12]  K. Drozd Language acquisition and conceptual development: Children's weak interpretations of universally quantified questions , 2001 .

[13]  A pilot study of quantification in child Catalan , 2002 .

[14]  Stephen Crain,et al.  Quantification Without Qualification , 1996 .

[15]  Thomas Roeper,et al.  The Acquisition Path of Quantifiers: Two Kinds of Spreading , 2004 .

[16]  J. Piaget,et al.  The early growth of logic in the child : classification and seriation , 1965 .

[17]  Jill de Villiers,et al.  The emergence of bound variable structures , 1991 .

[18]  John O. Willis,et al.  NEPSY: A Developmental Neuropsychological Assessment , 2008 .

[19]  Stephen Crain,et al.  The strength of the universal quantifier in child language , 2007 .

[20]  A. Gualmini,et al.  The Question–Answer Requirement for scope assignment , 2008 .

[21]  Irina A. Sekerina,et al.  Shortcuts to Quantifier Interpretation in Children and Adults , 2006 .

[22]  Bartjan Hollebrandse Topichood and quantification in L1 Dutch , 2004 .

[23]  Jeanine L. Clancy,et al.  Impacts of a Comprehensive School Readiness Curriculum for Preschool Children at Risk for Educational Difficulties. , 2015, Child development.