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  1. Here come the nouns: Czech two-year-olds use verb number endings to predict sentence subjects.Filip Smolík & Veronika Bláhová - 2022 - Cognition 219 (C):104964.
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  • 8-Month-Old infants' Ability to Process Word Order is Shaped by the Amount of Exposure.Caterina Marino & Judit Gervain - 2021 - Cognition 213 (C):104717.
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  • Arc-shaped pitch contours facilitate item recognition in non-human animals.Juan M. Toro & Paola Crespo-Bojorque - 2021 - Cognition 213 (C):104614.
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  • A Comparative Perspective on the Role of Acoustic Cues in Detecting Language Structure.Jutta L. Mueller, Carel ten Cate & Juan M. Toro - 2018 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (3):859-874.
    Mueller et al. discuss the role of acoustic cues in detecting language structure more generally. Across languages, there are clear links between acoustic cues and syntactic structure. They show that AGL experiments implementing analogous links demonstrate that prosodic cues, as well as various auditory biases, facilitate the learning of structural rules. Some of these biases, e.g. for auditory grouping, are also present in other species.
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  • Non‐Arbitrariness in Mapping Word Form to Meaning: Cross‐Linguistic Formal Markers of Word Concreteness.Jamie Reilly, Jinyi Hung & Chris Westbury - 2017 - Cognitive Science 41 (4):1071-1089.
    Arbitrary symbolism is a linguistic doctrine that predicts an orthogonal relationship between word forms and their corresponding meanings. Recent corpora analyses have demonstrated violations of arbitrary symbolism with respect to concreteness, a variable characterizing the sensorimotor salience of a word. In addition to qualitative semantic differences, abstract and concrete words are also marked by distinct morphophonological structures such as length and morphological complexity. Native English speakers show sensitivity to these markers in tasks such as auditory word recognition and naming. One (...)
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  • Frequent frames as a cue for grammatical categories in child directed speech.Toben H. Mintz - 2003 - Cognition 90 (1):91-117.
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  • The differential role of phonological and distributional cues in grammatical categorisation.Padraic Monaghan, Nick Chater & Morten H. Christiansen - 2005 - Cognition 96 (2):143-182.
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  • Language learning in infancy: Does the empirical evidence support a domain specific language acquisition device?Christina Behme & Helene Deacon - 2008 - Philosophical Psychology 21 (5):641 – 671.
    Poverty of the Stimulus Arguments have convinced many linguists and philosophers of language that a domain specific language acquisition device (LAD) is necessary to account for language learning. Here we review empirical evidence that casts doubt on the necessity of this domain specific device. We suggest that more attention needs to be paid to the early stages of language acquisition. Many seemingly innate language-related abilities have to be learned over the course of several months. Further, the language input contains rich (...)
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  • A distributional perspective on the gavagai problem in early word learning.Richard N. Aslin & Alice F. Wang - 2021 - Cognition 213 (C):104680.
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  • The Specificity of Sound Symbolic Correspondences in Spoken Language.Christina Y. Tzeng, Lynne C. Nygaard & Laura L. Namy - 2017 - Cognitive Science:2191-2220.
    Although language has long been regarded as a primarily arbitrary system, sound symbolism, or non-arbitrary correspondences between the sound of a word and its meaning, also exists in natural language. Previous research suggests that listeners are sensitive to sound symbolism. However, little is known about the specificity of these mappings. This study investigated whether sound symbolic properties correspond to specific meanings, or whether these properties generalize across semantic dimensions. In three experiments, native English-speaking adults heard sound symbolic foreign words for (...)
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  • Word frequency, function words and the second gavagai problem.Jean-Rémy Hochmann - 2013 - Cognition 128 (1):13-25.
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  • Précis of What Babies Know.Elizabeth S. Spelke - 2024 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 47:e120.
    Where does human knowledge begin? Research on human infants, children, adults, and nonhuman animals, using diverse methods from the cognitive, brain, and computational sciences, provides evidence for six early emerging, domain-specific systems of core knowledge. These automatic, unconscious systems are situated between perceptual systems and systems of explicit concepts and beliefs. They emerge early in infancy, guide children's learning, and function throughout life.
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  • The distributional structure of grammatical categories in speech to young children.Toben H. Mintz, Elissa L. Newport & Thomas G. Bever - 2002 - Cognitive Science 26 (4):393-424.
    We present a series of three analyses of young children's linguistic input to determine the distributional information it could plausibly offer to the process of grammatical category learning. Each analysis was conducted on four separate corpora from the CHILDES database (MacWhinney, 2000) of speech directed to children under 2;5. We showthat, in accord with other findings, a distributional analysis which categorizeswords based on their co‐occurrence patterns with surroundingwords successfully categorizes the majority of nouns and verbs. In Analyses 2 and 3, (...)
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  • Prosody facilitates learning the word order in a new language.Amanda Saksida, Ana Flo, Bruno Guedes, Marina Nespor & Marcela Peña Garay - 2021 - Cognition 213 (C):104686.
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  • Précis of how children learn the meanings of words.Paul Bloom - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (6):1095-1103.
    Normal children learn tens of thousands of words, and do so quickly and efficiently, often in highly impoverished environments. In How Children Learn the Meanings of Words, I argue that word learning is the product of certain cognitive and linguistic abilities that include the ability to acquire concepts, an appreciation of syntactic cues to meaning, and a rich understanding of the mental states of other people. These capacities are powerful, early emerging, and to some extent uniquely human, but they are (...)
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  • A hierarchy of cortical responses to sequence violations in three-month-old infants.Anahita Basirat, Stanislas Dehaene & Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz - 2014 - Cognition 132 (2):137-150.
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  • The missing chapter: The interaction between behavioral and symbolic inheritance.Anne S. Warlaumont & Rick Dale - 2007 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (4):377-378.
    A strength of Jablonka & Lamb's (J&L's) book lies in its accessible as well as thorough treatment of genetic and epigenetic inheritance. The authors also provide a stimulating framework integrating evolutionary research across disciplines. A weakness is its unsystematic treatment of the interaction between behavioral and symbolic inheritance, particularly in their discussion of language.
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  • Studying the Real-Time Interpretation of Novel Noun and Verb Meanings in Young Children.Alex de Carvalho, Mireille Babineau, John C. Trueswell, Sandra R. Waxman & Anne Christophe - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • Rapid learning of syllable classes from a perceptually continuous speech stream.Ansgar D. Endress & Luca L. Bonatti - 2007 - Cognition 105 (2):247-299.
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  • Sound to meaning correspondences facilitate word learning.Lynne C. Nygaard, Allison E. Cook & Laura L. Namy - 2009 - Cognition 112 (1):181-186.
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  • Lexical Categories at the Edge of the Word.Luca Onnis & Morten H. Christiansen - 2008 - Cognitive Science 32 (1):184-221.
    Language acquisition may be one of the most difficult tasks that children face during development. They have to segment words from fluent speech, figure out the meanings of these words, and discover the syntactic constraints for joining them together into meaningful sentences. Over the past couple of decades, computational modeling has emerged as a new paradigm for gaining insights into the mechanisms by which children may accomplish these feats. Unfortunately, many of these models assume a computational complexity and linguistic knowledge (...)
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  • Perceptual categories enable pattern generalization in songbirds.Jordan A. Comins & Timothy Q. Gentner - 2013 - Cognition 128 (2):113-118.
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  • Frequent frames as cues to part-of-speech in Dutch: Why filler frequency matters.Richard Eduard Leibbrandt & D. M. Powers - 2010 - In S. Ohlsson & R. Catrambone (eds.), Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Cognitive Science Society.
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  • Dutch and English toddlers' use of linguistic cues in predicting upcoming turn transitions.Imme Lammertink, Marisa Casillas, Titia Benders, Brechtje Post & Paula Fikkert - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Language-experience facilitates discrimination of /d-/ in monolingual and bilingual acquisition of English.Megha Sundara, Linda Polka & Fred Genesee - 2006 - Cognition 100 (2):369-388.
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  • Learning to talk about events from narrated video in a construction grammar framework.Dominey Peter Ford & Jean-David Boucher - 2005 - Artificial Intelligence 167 (1-2):31-61.
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  • Stress changes the representational landscape: evidence from word segmentation.Suzanne Curtin, Toben H. Mintz & Morten H. Christiansen - 2005 - Cognition 96 (3):233-262.
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  • How infants' utterances grow: A probabilistic account of early language development.Qihui Xu, Martin Chodorow & Virginia Valian - 2023 - Cognition 230 (C):105275.
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  • Words in a sea of sounds: the output of infant statistical learning.Jenny R. Saffran - 2001 - Cognition 81 (2):149-169.
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  • Initial morphological learning in preverbal infants.Alexandra Marquis & Rushen Shi - 2012 - Cognition 122 (1):61-66.
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  • Word frequency as a cue for identifying function words in infancy.Jean-Rémy Hochmann, Ansgar D. Endress & Jacques Mehler - 2010 - Cognition 115 (3):444-457.
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