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Basic-level nouns: first learned but misunderstood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 July 2002

LARAINE McDONOUGH
Affiliation:
Brooklyn College, The City University of New York Graduate Center

Abstract

It is commonly believed that first-learned words correspond with first-learned categories (both described as ‘basic level’) leading to the belief that language acquisition is a reasonably good indicator of early cognition. However, toddlers often overextend their first words. Do these errors reflect their comprehension? Two experiments were conducted in order to examine two-year-olds' production and comprehension of basic-level terms. The results showed overextensions both in production (e.g. children labelled a rocket ‘airplane’) and comprehension (e.g. they pointed to a rocket when airplane was requested). One reason toddlers extend labels to a wider conceptual domain is because they have not clearly differentiated basic-level concepts from related conceptual categories.

Type
NOTE
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Preparation of this article was supported by NSF Research Grants SBR-970895, SBR 9973399. I would like to thank Lisa Hoag, Laura Holmes, Shannon Prudden, and Pamela Smith for assisting with data collection and coding.