Vocabulary size and structure affects real-time lexical recognition in 18-month-olds
Male
Science
Q
05 social sciences
R
Infant
Recognition, Psychology
Language Development
Vocabulary
Semantics
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Medicine
Humans
Female
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Research Article
Language
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0219290
Publication Date:
2019-07-11T17:32:51Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
The mature lexicon encodes semantic relations between words, and these connections can alternately facilitate and interfere with language processing. We explore the emergence of these processing dynamics in 18-month-olds (N = 79) using a novel approach that calculates individualized semantic structure at multiple granularities in participants' productive vocabularies. Participants completed two interleaved eye-tracked word recognition tasks involving semantically unrelated and related picture contexts, which sought to measure the impact of lexical facilitation and interference on processing, respectively. Semantic structure and vocabulary size differentially impacted processing in each task. Category level structure facilitated word recognition in 18-month-olds with smaller productive vocabularies, while overall lexical connectivity interfered with word recognition for toddlers with relatively larger vocabularies. The results suggest that, while semantic structure at multiple granularities is measurable even in small lexicons, mechanisms of semantic interference and facilitation are driven by the development of structure at different granularities. We consider these findings in light of accounts of adult word recognition that posits that different levels of structure index strong and weak activation from nearby and distant semantic neighbors. We also consider further directions for developmental change in these patterns.
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