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Adults Adapt to Child Speech in Causative Semantics

You, Guanghao; Daum, Moritz M; Stoll, Sabine (2024). Adults Adapt to Child Speech in Causative Semantics. Cognitive Science, 48(9):e13495.

Abstract

Causation is a core feature of human cognition and language. How children learn about intricate causal meanings is yet unresolved. Here, we focus on how children learn verbs that express causation. Such verbs, known as lexical causatives (e.g., break and raise), lack explicit morphosyntactic markers indicating causation, thus requiring that the child generalizes the causal meaning from the context. The language addressed to children presumably plays a crucial role in this learning process. Hence, we tested whether adults adapt their use of lexical causatives to children when talking to them in day-to-day interactions. We analyzed naturalistic longitudinal data from 12 children in the Manchester corpus (spanning from 20 to 36 months of age). To detect semantic generalization, we employed a network approach with semantics learned from cross-situational contexts. Our results show an increasing trend in the expansion of causative semantics, observable in both child speech and child-directed speech. Adults consistently maintain somewhat more intricate causative semantic networks compared to children. However, both groups display evolving patterns. Around 28–30 months of age, children undergo a reduction in the degree of causative generalization, followed by a slightly time-lagged adjustment by adults in their speech directed to children. These findings substantiate adults' adaptation in child-directed speech, extending to semantics. They highlight child-directed speech as a highly adaptive and subconscious teaching tool that facilitates the dynamic processes of language acquisition.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:06 Faculty of Arts > Department of Comparative Language Science
Special Collections > NCCR Evolving Language
Special Collections > Centers of Competence > Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language Evolution
06 Faculty of Arts > Linguistic Research Infrastructure (LiRI)
Dewey Decimal Classification:490 Other languages
890 Other literatures
410 Linguistics
Scopus Subject Areas:Social Sciences & Humanities > Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Life Sciences > Cognitive Neuroscience
Physical Sciences > Artificial Intelligence
Language:English
Date:16 September 2024
Deposited On:03 Oct 2024 09:43
Last Modified:31 Dec 2024 02:40
Publisher:Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
ISSN:0364-0213
OA Status:Hybrid
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/cogs.13495
PubMed ID:39283264
Project Information:
  • Funder: SNSF
  • Grant ID: 169712
  • Project Title: The role of causality in early verb learning: language-specific factors vs. universal strategies
  • Funder: SNSF
  • Grant ID: 180888
  • Project Title: NCCR Evolving Language (phase I)
  • Funder: FP7
  • Grant ID: 615988
  • Project Title: Acquisition processes in maximally diverse languages: Min(d)ing the ambient language
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  • Language: English
  • Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

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