Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10457579 | Cognition | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Fluent speakers' representations of verbs include semantic knowledge about the nouns that can serve as their arguments. These “selectional restrictions” of a verb can in principle be recruited to learn the meaning of a novel noun. For example, the sentence He ate the carambola licenses the inference that carambola refers to something edible. We ask whether 15- and 19-month-old infants can recruit their nascent verb lexicon to identify the referents of novel nouns that appear as the verbs' subjects. We compared infants' interpretation of a novel noun (e.g., the dax) in two conditions: one in which dax is presented as the subject of animate-selecting construction (e.g., The dax is crying), and the other in which dax is the subject of an animacy-neutral construction (e.g., The dax is right here). Results indicate that by 19Â months, infants use their representations of known verbs to inform the meaning of a novel noun that appears as its argument.
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Authors
Brock Ferguson, Eileen Graf, Sandra R. Waxman,