What’s in a name, and when can a [beep] be the same?

Lany, Jill and Thompson, Abbie and Aguero, Ariel (2022) What’s in a name, and when can a [beep] be the same? Developmental Psychology, 58 (2). pp. 209-221. ISSN 0012-1649

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Abstract

Words influence cognition well before infants know their meanings. For example, three-month-olds are more likely to form visually based categories when exemplars are paired with spoken words than with sine-wave tones, a likely precursor to learning symbolic relations between words and their referents. However, it is unclear why words have these effects. In 3 experiments we tested the hypothesis that exaggerated “showing” gestures used when naming objects, and the resultant cross-modal synchrony between a name and object motion, can affect object categorization. Participants were 119 3-month-old infants (56 were female and 63 were male). According to caregiver report, the sample was composed of European American (N = 114) Black (N = 6), Hispanic (N = 2) and multiracial (N = 6) infants. Participants were growing up predominantly in homes with at least 1 parent who completed a college education or a higher degree (80%), and the remaining 20% completed high school. After replicating evidence that words and tones have different effects on categorization, we found that prefamiliarizing infants with tone-object synchrony leads tones to influence categorization as words do. Moreover, we found that concentrated experience with word-object synchrony enhances the effects that words themselves have on categorization.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Developmental Psychology
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/3300/3317
Subjects:
?? amodal relationscategorizationlanguage acquisitionlanguage and thoughtdemographydevelopmental and educational psychologylife-span and life-course studies ??
ID Code:
221745
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
31 Jul 2024 09:30
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
04 Oct 2024 00:27