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International Centre for Language and Communicative Development: Corpus and Experimental Study: Children's Acquisition of Wh-questions, 2019 ...
McCauley, Stewart; Bannard, Colin; Theakston, Anna. - : UK Data Service, 2021
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2
Multiword units lead to errors of commission in children's spontaneous production: “What corpus data can tell us?*”
In: Dev Sci (2021)
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3
Does Early Child Language Predict Internalizing Symptoms in Adolescence? An Investigation in Two Birth Cohorts Born 30 Years Apart
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The crosslinguistic acquisition of sentence structure: Computational modeling and grammaticality judgments from adult and child speakers of English, Japanese, Hindi, Hebrew and K'iche'()
In: Cognition (2020)
Abstract: This preregistered study tested three theoretical proposals for how children form productive yet restricted linguistic generalizations, avoiding errors such as *The clown laughed the man, across three age groups (5–6 years, 9–10 years, adults) and five languages (English, Japanese, Hindi, Hebrew and K'iche'). Participants rated, on a five-point scale, correct and ungrammatical sentences describing events of causation (e.g., *Someone laughed the man; Someone made the man laugh; Someone broke the truck; ?Someone made the truck break). The verb-semantics hypothesis predicts that, for all languages, by-verb differences in acceptability ratings will be predicted by the extent to which the causing and caused event (e.g., amusing and laughing) merge conceptually into a single event (as rated by separate groups of adult participants). The entrenchment and preemption hypotheses predict, for all languages, that by-verb differences in acceptability ratings will be predicted by, respectively, the verb's relative overall frequency, and frequency in nearly-synonymous constructions (e.g., X made Y laugh for *Someone laughed the man). Analysis using mixed effects models revealed that entrenchment/preemption effects (which could not be distinguished due to collinearity) were observed for all age groups and all languages except K'iche', which suffered from a thin corpus and showed only preemption sporadically. All languages showed effects of event-merge semantics, except K'iche' which showed only effects of supplementary semantic predictors. We end by presenting a computational model which successfully simulates this pattern of results in a single discriminative-learning mechanism, achieving by-verb correlations of around r = 0.75 with human judgment data.
Keyword: Article
URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104310
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32623135
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7397526/
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The crosslinguistic acquisition of sentence structure: Computational modeling and grammaticality judgments from adult and child speakers of English, Japanese, Hindi, Hebrew and K'iche'
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6
Can Automated Gesture Recognition Support the Study of Child Language Development?
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7
The crosslinguistic acquisition of sentence structure: Computational modeling and grammaticality judgments from adult and child speakers of English, Japanese, Hindi, Hebrew and K'iche'.
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8
Identifying robust markers of Parkinson's disease in typing behaviour using a CNN-LSTM network.
Dhir, Neil; Bannard, Colin J; Stafford, Tom. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2020
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9
Can Automated Gesture Recognition Support the Study of Child Language Development?
Pine, Julian M; Samanta, Soumitra; Team, Language05. - : cognitivesciencesociety.org, 2020
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10
Early Pragmatics in Deaf and Hard of Hearing Infants.
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11
Disentangling the Different Factors that Contribute to the Production of 3rd Person Singular Errors in Spanish
Martin, Joseph. - 2019
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12
Analyzing group behavior from language use with natural language processing and experimental methods : three applications in political science and sociology
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13
Effects of Both Preemption and Entrenchment in the Retreat from Verb Overgeneralization Errors: Four Reanalyses, an Extended Replication, and a Meta-Analytic Synthesis
Ambridge, Ben; Sala, Giovanni; Wonnacott, Elizabeth. - : University of California Press, 2018
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14
Differences in the Association between Segment and Language: Early Bilinguals Pattern with Monolinguals and Are Less Accurate than Late Bilinguals
Blanco, Cynthia P.; Bannard, Colin; Smiljanic, Rajka. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2016
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15
Cross-language speech perception in context : advantages for recent language learners and variation across language-specific acoustic cues
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16
Differences in the Association between Segment and Language: Early Bilinguals Pattern with Monolinguals and Are Less Accurate than Late Bilinguals
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17
Imitation of words and actions across cultures
Klinger, Jörn. - 2015
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18
Children’s willingness to accept labels in two languages: the role of exposure
Rojo, Dolly P.. - 2015
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19
The effects of payoffs and feedback on the disambiguation of relative clauses
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20
The "resolution" of verb meaning in context
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