Lexical Neighborhoods and the Word-Form Representations of 14-Month-Olds

The degree to which infants represent phonetic detail in words has been a source of controversy in phonology and developmental psychology. One prominent hypothesis holds that infants store words in a vague or inaccurate form until the learning of similar-sounding neighbors forces attention to subtle phonetic distinctions. In the experiment reported here, we used a visual fixation task to assess word recognition. We present the first evidence indicating that, in fact, the lexical representations of 14- and 15-month-olds are encoded in fine detail, even when this detail is not functionally necessary for distinguishing similar words in the infant's vocabulary. Exposure to words is sufficient for well-specified lexical representations, even well before the vocabulary spurt. These results suggest developmental continuity in infants' representations of speech: As infants begin to build a vocabulary and learn word meanings, they use the perceptual abilities previously demonstrated in tasks testing the discrimination and categorization of meaningless syllables.

[1]  I. Sigel,et al.  HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY , 2006 .

[2]  N. Waterson,et al.  Child phonology: a prosodic view , 1971, Journal of Linguistics.

[3]  H. Clark,et al.  In cognitive development and the acquisition of language , 1973 .

[4]  O. K. Garnica THE DEVELOPMENT OF PHONEMIC SPEECH PERCEPTION1 , 1973 .

[5]  F. Moore Cognitive development and the acquisition of language , 1973 .

[6]  C. A. Ferguson,et al.  WORDS AND SOUNDS IN EARLY LANGUAGE ACQUISITION: ENGLISH INITIAL CONSONANTS IN THE FIRST FIFTY WORDS , 1977 .

[7]  D. Slobin,et al.  Studies of child language development , 1973 .

[8]  C. A. Ferguson,et al.  WORDS AND SOUNDS IN EARLY LANGUAGE ACQUISITION , 1975 .

[9]  J. Werker,et al.  Cross-language speech perception: Evidence for perceptual reorganization during the first year of life , 1984 .

[10]  P. Menyuk,et al.  Language acquisition: Early strategies for the perception and production of words and sounds , 1986 .

[11]  S. Velleman The role of linguistic perception in later phonological development , 1988, Applied Psycholinguistics.

[12]  P. Luce,et al.  Similarity neighbourhoods of words in young children's lexicons , 1990, Journal of Child Language.

[13]  Peter W. Jusczyk,et al.  Some reflections on developmental changes in speech perception and production , 1993 .

[14]  M. Tomasello,et al.  Variability in early communicative development. , 1994, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.

[15]  B. Mihov,et al.  Received; accepted , 1994 .

[16]  T. A. Cartwright,et al.  Distributional regularity and phonotactic constraints are useful for segmentation , 1996, Cognition.

[17]  D. Kuhn,et al.  Cognition, Perception, and Language , 1997 .

[18]  J. Werker,et al.  Infants listen for more phonetic detail in speech perception than in word-learning tasks , 1997, Nature.

[19]  J. Metsala,et al.  Spoken vocabulary growth and the segmental restructuring of lexical representations: precursors to p , 1998 .

[20]  D. Pisoni,et al.  Recognizing Spoken Words: The Neighborhood Activation Model , 1998, Ear and hearing.

[21]  David B. Pisoni,et al.  Speech and auditory processing during infancy: Constraints on and precursors to language. , 1998 .

[22]  B. Hayes,et al.  Phonological Acquisition in Optimality Theory: the Early Stages 1 Submitted for a Forthcoming Volume on Phonological Acquisition and Typology, Edited Phonological Acquisition in Optimality Theory: the Early Stages , 1999 .

[23]  R. Aslin,et al.  Spoken word recognition and lexical representation in very young children , 2000, Cognition.

[24]  J. Werker,et al.  Infants' Ability to Learn Phonetically Similar Words: Effects of Age and Vocabulary Size , 2002 .

[25]  Richard N Aslin,et al.  Phonological neighbourhoods in the developing lexicon. , 2003, Journal of child language.