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Psycholinguistics in the field: research methods for cross-linguistic and cross-cultural research with children 1 Sonja Eisenbeiß presenting studies in collaboration with ...
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Child language documentation: The sketch acquisition project
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Abstract:
This paper reports on an on-going project designed to collect comparable corpus data on child language and child-directed language in under-researched languages. Despite a long history of cross-linguistic research, there is a severe empirical bias within language acquisition research: Data is available for less than 2% of the world's languages, heavily skewed towards the larger and better-described languages. As a result, theories of language development tend to be grounded in a non-representative sample, and we know little about the acquisition of typologically-diverse languages from different families, regions, or sociocultural contexts. It is very likely that the reasons are to be found in the forbidding methodological challenges of constructing child language corpora under fieldwork conditions with their strict requirements on participant selection, sampling intervals, and amounts of data. There is thus an urgent need for proposals that facilitate and encourage language acquisition research across a wide variety of languages. Adopting a language documentation perspective, we illustrate an approach that combines the construction of manageable corpora of natural interaction with and between children with a sketch description of the corpus data – resulting in a set of comparable corpora and comparable sketches that form the basis for cross-linguistic comparisons. ; LD&C-SP25__2_Hellwig+etal.pdf
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Keyword:
child language; child-directed language; corpus research; language acquisition; language socialization
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10125/74657
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Child language documentation: The sketch acquisition project
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Expressions of directed caused accompanied motion events in Totoli, a Western Austronesian language of Indonesia
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Children’s narratives in Papua New Guinea: A case study of Qaqet
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Child-directed language – and how it informs the documentation and description of the adult language
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Roots of ergativity in Africa (and beyond)
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In: Studies in African linguistics. - 49, 1 (2020) , 111-140, ISSN: 0039-3533 (2020)
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Child-directed language – and how it informs the documentation and description of the adult language
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Initial observations on complex predicates in Qaqet children’s language
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Child-directed language – and how it informs the documentation and description of the adult language
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Property concepts in Tabaq: More than one road can lead to Rome
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Child-directed language – and how it informs the documentation and description of the adult language
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In: Hellwig, Birgit; Jung, Dagmar (2020). Child-directed language – and how it informs the documentation and description of the adult language. Language Documentation & Conservation, 14:188-214. (2020)
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