Browsing by Author "Henderson, Annette M. E."
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Item Open Access 24-Month-Olds' Selective Learning Is Not an All-or-None Phenomenon(2015-06) Henderson, Annette M. E.; Graham, Susan; Schell, VanessaEvidence that children maintain some memories of labels that are unlikely to be shared by the broader linguistic community suggests that children's selective learning is not an all-or-none phenomenon. Across three experiments, we examine the contexts in which 24-month-olds show selective learning and whether they adjust their selective learning if provided with cues of in-context relevance. In each experiment, toddlers were first familiarized with a source who acted on familiar objects in either typical or atypical ways (e.g., used a car to mimic driving or hop like a rabbit) or labeled familiar objects incorrectly (e.g., called a spoon a "brush"). The source then labeled unfamiliar objects using either a novel word (e.g., fep; Experiment 1) or sound (e.g., ring; Experiments 2 and 3). Results indicated that toddlers learnt words from the typical source but not from the atypical or inaccurate source. In contrast, toddlers extended sound labels only when a source who had previously acted atypically provided the sound labels. Thus, toddlers, like preschoolers, avoid forming semantic representations of new object labels that are unlikely to be relevant in the broader community, but will form event-based memories of such labels if they have reason to suspect such labels will have in-context relevance.Item Open Access The influence of object pre-exposure on two-year-olds' disambiguation of novel labels(Cambridge University Press, 2005-02) Graham, Susan; Turner, Juanita N.; Henderson, Annette M. E.We investigated whether manipulating the perceived novelty of nameless objects would influence two-year-olds' tendency to map novel words to these objects. In Experiment 1, children who had been pre-exposed to target nameless objects were more likely to map novel words onto those objects than children who were not pre-exposed to the objects or children who were pre-exposed to non-target members of the nameless object categories. In Experiment 2, children who were pre-exposed to a nameless object were more likely to assign the novel label to that object than to either a familiar object or an unfamiliar object that had not been pre-exposed. The results of these studies suggest that reducing the novelty of nameless objects increases two-year-olds' tendency to map a novel word to a nameless object.Item Open Access Nineteen-Month-Olds' Understanding of the Conventionality of Object Labels Versus Desires(Lawrence Erlbaum : INFANCY, 2006-01) Graham, Susan; Stock, Hayli R.; Henderson, Annette M. E.We assessed 19-month-olds’ appreciation of the conventional nature of object labels versus desires. Infants played a finding game with an experimenter who stated her intention to find the referent of a novel word (word group), to find an object she wanted (desire group), or simply to look in a box (control group). A 2nd experimenter then administered a comprehension task to assess infants’ tendency to extend information to a 2nd person who was not present at the time of learning. Results indicate that infants chose the target object when the 2nd experimenter asked for the referent of the novel label but not when she requested the referent of her desire. These findings demonstrate that 19-month-olds understand that words are conventional, but desires are not.Item Open Access Two-Year-Olds' Appreciation of the Shared Nature of Novel Object Labels(Lawrence Erlbaum : Journal of Cognition and Development, 2005-01) Henderson, Annette M. E.; Graham, SusanTwo-year-olds’ appreciation of the shared nature of object labels versus object preferences was examined in 2 studies. A total of 128 24- to 27-month-olds played a finding game with an experimenter during which they were taught a piece of information about a target object in a nonostensive learning context. In Experiment 1, children were presented with a cue signaling the referent of a novel label. In Experiment 2, children were presented with a cue signaling the experimenter’s preference for a particular object. Results indicate children appreciate that knowledge of an object’s label is shared between 2 different individuals, but object preferences are not.