Weaving a Lexicon

Front Cover
D. Geoffrey Hall, Sandra R. Waxman
MIT Press, 2004 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 648 pages

The studies in Weaving a Lexicon make a significant contribution to the growing field of lexical acquisition by considering the multidimensional way in which infants and children acquire the lexicon of their native language. They examine the many strands of knowledge and skill--including perceptual sensitivities, conceptual and semantic constraints, and communicative intent--that children must weave together in the process of word learning, and show the different mix of these factors used at different developmental points. In considering the many different factors at work, the contributors avoid both the either-or approach, which singles out one strand to explain word learning throughout childhood, and the all-inclusive approach, which considers the melange of factors together. Their goal is to discover precisely which strands of ability or understanding make which contributions to acquisition at which points in infancy and childhood.The nineteen chapters are arranged in two broadly thematic sections. The chapters in Initial Acquisitions, focus on issues involved in word learning during infancy, including how learners represent the sound patterns of words, infants' use of action knowledge to understand the meaning of words, and the links between early word learning and conceptual organization. In Later Acquisitions, the chapters treat topics concerning the stages of toddler and preschooler language acquisition, including part-of- speech information in word learning, the proper-count distinction, and a comparison of verb acquisition in English and Spanish. Because the contributors present their work in the broader context of the interconnection of different processes in lexical acquisition, the chapters in Weaving A Lexicon should suggest new directions for research in the field.

 

Contents

Contents
22
From
41
Early
79
Infants Use of Action Knowledge to Get a Grasp
149
Hybrid Theories at the Frontier of Developmental
173
Myths of Word Learning
205
Why It Is Hard to Label Our Concepts
257
Everything Had a Name and Each Name Gave Birth
295
The Nature of WordLearning Biases and Their Roles
411
Generic Noun Phrases
445
Contexts of Early Word Learning
485
Converging on Word Meaning
509
The Role of Comparison in Childrens Early Word
533
A Comparison
569
Syntactic Bootstrapping and
603
Author Index
637

Preschoolers Use and Misuse of PartofSpeech
339

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About the author (2004)

D. Geoffrey Hall is Director of the Language Development Centre and Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia. Sandra R. Waxman is director of the Program on Language and Cognition and WCAS Professor in the Department of Psychology at Northwestern University.