Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5039971 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Children recruit sound symbolic cues to infer meaning for unfamiliar words.•Sensitivity to sound symbolism increases across development.•Sound symbolism may facilitate early word learning.•Pre-linguistic cross-modal mappings may underlie sound symbolism sensitivity.•Sensitivity to less deterministic sound symbolism develops with language experience.

The current study examined developmental change in children's sensitivity to sound symbolism. Three-, five-, and seven-year-old children heard sound symbolic novel words and foreign words meaning round and pointy and chose which of two pictures (one round and one pointy) best corresponded to each word they heard. Task performance varied as a function of both word type and age group such that accuracy was greater for novel words than for foreign words, and task performance increased with age for both word types. For novel words, children in all age groups reliably chose the correct corresponding picture. For foreign words, 3-year-olds showed chance performance, whereas 5- and 7-year-olds showed reliably above-chance performance. Results suggest increased sensitivity to sound symbolic cues with development and imply that although sensitivity to sound symbolism may be available early and facilitate children's word-referent mappings, sensitivity to subtler sound symbolic cues requires greater language experience.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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