TY - JOUR
T1 - How children explore the phonological network in child-directed speech
T2 - A survival analysis of children's first word productions
AU - Carlson, Matthew T.
AU - Sonderegger, Morgan
AU - Bane, Max
N1 - Funding Information:
Data analysis and preparation of this article were completed with the support of a NAEd/Spencer Foundation postdoctoral fellowship to MTC, and by a Daniels Graduate Fellowship at the University of Chicago to MS. We express our sincerest gratitude to Susan Goldin-Meadow for making the Chicago Corpus, collected under NICHD Grant P01 HD40605 to SGM, available to us. We also wish to thank Stephen Raudenbush and Jacob Foster for suggestions regarding the analysis; Jason Voigt and Kristi Schonwald for their assistance with the corpus; Matt Goldrick, Melinda Fricke, Mits Ota, and two anonymous JML reviewers for their helpful comments on the manuscript; as well as audiences at the University of Chicago, Northwestern University, NetSci 2012, and the LSA for their feedback.
PY - 2014/8
Y1 - 2014/8
N2 - We explored how phonological network structure influences the age of words' first appearance in children's (14-50. months) speech, using a large, longitudinal corpus of spontaneous child-caregiver interactions. We represent the caregiver lexicon as a network in which each word is connected to all of its phonological neighbors, and consider both words' local neighborhood density (degree), and also their embeddedness among interconnected neighborhoods (clustering coefficient and coreness). The larger-scale structure reflected in the latter two measures is implicated in current theories of lexical development and processing, but its role in lexical development has not yet been explored. Multilevel discrete-time survival analysis revealed that children are more likely to produce new words whose network properties support lexical access for production: high degree, but low clustering coefficient and coreness. These effects appear to be strongest at earlier ages and largely absent from 30. months on. These results suggest that both a word's local connectivity in the lexicon and its position in the lexicon as a whole influences when it is learned, and they underscore how general lexical processing mechanisms contribute to productive vocabulary development.
AB - We explored how phonological network structure influences the age of words' first appearance in children's (14-50. months) speech, using a large, longitudinal corpus of spontaneous child-caregiver interactions. We represent the caregiver lexicon as a network in which each word is connected to all of its phonological neighbors, and consider both words' local neighborhood density (degree), and also their embeddedness among interconnected neighborhoods (clustering coefficient and coreness). The larger-scale structure reflected in the latter two measures is implicated in current theories of lexical development and processing, but its role in lexical development has not yet been explored. Multilevel discrete-time survival analysis revealed that children are more likely to produce new words whose network properties support lexical access for production: high degree, but low clustering coefficient and coreness. These effects appear to be strongest at earlier ages and largely absent from 30. months on. These results suggest that both a word's local connectivity in the lexicon and its position in the lexicon as a whole influences when it is learned, and they underscore how general lexical processing mechanisms contribute to productive vocabulary development.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jml.2014.05.005
DO - 10.1016/j.jml.2014.05.005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84902979118
SN - 0749-596X
VL - 75
SP - 159
EP - 180
JO - Journal of Memory and Language
JF - Journal of Memory and Language
ER -