Memory and attention make smart word learning: an alternative account of Akhtar, Carpenter, and Tomasello.

Two general types of accounts have been offered to explain the smartness of young children's word learning. One account postulates that children enter the word-learning task with specific knowledge about how words link to categories. The second account puts the source of children's smart word learning in knowledge about the pragmatics of communication and social interactions. The present experiment tested a third idea: that children's seemingly smart word learning derives from general, indeed mundane, cognitive processes. Forty-eight children from 18 to 28 months of age participated in a task designed to test our alternative explanation as applied to Akhtar, Carpenter, and Tomasello's (1996) finding that children use knowledge of the communicative intents of others to interpret a novel noun. Specifically, we suggest that children's attention to the proper referent was guided by the general effects of a contextual shift on memory and attention. The procedure in the present study was identical to that of Akhtar et al. except that we differentiated the target through a nonsocial context shift. Findings similar to that of Akhtar et al. emerged under the present procedures. These results strongly suggest that general attentional and memorial processes, and not knowledge about the communicative intents of others, may guide young children's word learning. These findings provide one demonstration of how smart word learning may emerge from more ordinary (and dumb) cognitive processes.

[1]  T. Sanocki Effects of font- and letter-specific experience on the perceptual processing of letters , 1992 .

[2]  A. D. Fisk,et al.  The effects of practice and task structure on components of the event-related brain potential. , 1986, Psychophysiology.

[3]  Ray Pike,et al.  Global matching: A comparison of the SAM, Minerva II, Matrix, and TODAM models. , 1989 .

[4]  A. Woodward,et al.  Infants' learning about words and sounds in relation to objects. , 1999, Child development.

[5]  Richard M. Shiffrin,et al.  SAM: A theory of probabilistic search in associative memory. , 1980 .

[6]  H. Ruff,et al.  Development of sustained, focused attention in young children during free play. , 1990 .

[7]  Sandra R. Waxman,et al.  Linguistic biases and the establishment of conceptual hierarchies: Evidence from preschool children , 1990 .

[8]  S. M. Smith,et al.  Environmental context-dependent recognition memory using a short-term memory task for input , 1986, Memory & cognition.

[9]  R. L. Fantz,et al.  Newborn infant attention to form of contour. , 1975, Child development.

[10]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Establishing word-object relations: a first step. , 1989, Child development.

[11]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Infants' ability to consult the speaker for clues to word reference , 1993, Journal of Child Language.

[12]  J. Reznick,et al.  Developmental and stylistic variation in the composition of early vocabulary , 1994, Journal of Child Language.

[13]  Edward J. Shoben,et al.  Multiple congruity effects in judgments of magnitude. , 1990 .

[14]  J. Astington,et al.  The child''s discovery of mind , 1994 .

[15]  C. Mervis,et al.  Two-year-olds readily learn multiple labels for the same basic-level category. , 1994, Child development.

[16]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  The importance of shape in early lexical learning , 1988 .

[17]  Sandra R. Waxman,et al.  The development of an appreciation of specific linkages between linguistic and conceptual organization , 1994 .

[18]  Sandra R. Waxman Convergences between semantic and conceptual organization in the preschool years , 1991 .

[19]  Elizabeth S. Spelke,et al.  Object perception , 1993 .

[20]  W. Merriman,et al.  Are names ever mapped onto preexisting categories , 1991 .

[21]  E Donchin,et al.  Brain potentials as indices of orthographic and phonological interaction during word matching. , 1987, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[22]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  A dynamic systems approach to development: Applications. , 1993 .

[23]  M. Humphreys,et al.  Different Ways to Cue a Coherent Memory System: A Theory for Episodic, Semantic, and Procedural Tasks. , 1989 .

[24]  Arthur F. Kramer,et al.  Brain Potentials as Indices of Orthographic and Phonological Interaction During word Matching , 1987 .

[25]  Are names ever mapped onto preexisting categories? , 1991, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[26]  M. Kinsbourne,et al.  Possible Origin of Speech in Selective Orienting. , 1985 .

[27]  Robert L. Goldstone Effects of Categorization on Color Perception , 1995 .

[28]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  Perceiving and remembering:Category stability, variability, and development , 1997 .

[29]  P. Bauer,et al.  What do infants recall of their lives? Memory for specific events by one- to two-year-olds. , 1996, The American psychologist.

[30]  Eric Eich,et al.  Context, memory, and integrated item/context imagery. , 1985 .

[31]  M. Tomasello,et al.  Eighteen-month-old children learn words in non-ostensive contexts , 1996, Journal of Child Language.

[32]  Douglas L. Hintzman,et al.  Judgments of frequency and recognition memory in a multiple-trace memory model. , 1988 .

[33]  C. Rovee-Collier,et al.  Contextual gating of memory retrieval. , 1989, Developmental psychobiology.

[34]  C. Rovee-Collier,et al.  Contextual determinants of retrieval in three-month-old infants☆ , 1985 .

[35]  L. Light,et al.  Effects of Changed Semantic Context on Recognition Memory , 1970 .

[36]  Steven M. Smith Environmental context—dependent memory. , 1988 .

[37]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  Learning words in nonostensive contexts , 1994 .

[38]  T. Sanocki,et al.  Intra- and interpattern relations in letter recognition. , 1991, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[39]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  Two-Year-Olds Use Pragmatic Cues to Differentiate Reference to Objects and Actions , 1995 .

[40]  E. Spelke,et al.  Ontological categories guide young children's inductions of word meaning: Object terms and substance terms , 1991, Cognition.

[41]  Suzanne Romaine Making Sense: The Acquisition of Shared Meaning , 1987 .

[42]  E. Spelke,et al.  Object perception and object-directed reaching in infancy. , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[43]  E. Markman Categorization and naming in children , 1989 .

[44]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Early referential understanding: Infants' ability to recognize referential acts for what they are. , 1993 .

[45]  The Effect of Hearing Similar-Sounding Words on Young 2-Year-Olds' Disambiguation of Novel Noun Reference. , 1995 .

[46]  E. Shoben,et al.  Context effects in symbolic magnitude comparisons. , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[47]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  The Role of Discourse Novelty in Early Word Learning , 1996 .

[48]  Alison Gopnik,et al.  Three types of early word: the emergence of social words, names and cognitive-relational words in the one-word stage and their relation to cognitive development , 1988 .

[49]  R. Shiffrin,et al.  Models for recall and recognition. , 1992, Annual review of psychology.

[50]  Willard Van Orman Quine,et al.  Word and Object , 1960 .

[51]  J. Connolly,et al.  Event-related potential sensitivity to acoustic and semantic properties of terminal words in sentences , 1992, Brain and Language.

[52]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Infants' contribution to the achievement of joint reference. , 1991, Child development.

[53]  R. Baillargeon,et al.  Object permanence in young infants: further evidence. , 1991, Child development.

[54]  S. Goldinger,et al.  Episodic encoding of voice attributes and recognition memory for spoken words. , 1993, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[55]  E. Markman,et al.  Children's sensitivity to constraints on word meaning: Taxonomic versus thematic relations , 1984, Cognitive Psychology.

[56]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  Naming in young children: a dumb attentional mechanism? , 1996, Cognition.

[57]  L. Barsalou,et al.  Ad hoc categories , 1983, Memory & cognition.

[58]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  The place of perception in children's concepts ☆ , 1993 .

[59]  A. Baddeley,et al.  When does context influence recognition memory , 1980 .

[60]  Mutsumi Imai,et al.  Children's Theories of Word Meaning: The Role of Shape Similarity in Early Acquisition , 1994 .