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Beyond Names for Things: Young Children's Acquisition of Verbs [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 428 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 589 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-May-2015
  • Kirjastus: Psychology Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1138876372
  • ISBN-13: 9781138876378
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 428 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 589 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-May-2015
  • Kirjastus: Psychology Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1138876372
  • ISBN-13: 9781138876378
Most research on children's lexical development has focused on their acquisition of names for concrete objects. This is the first edited volume to focus specifically on how children acquire their early verbs. Verbs are an especially important part of the early lexicon because of the role they play in children's emerging grammatical competence. The contributors to this book investigate:
* children's earliest words for actions and events and the cognitive structures that might underlie them,
* the possibility that the basic principles of word learning which apply in the case of nouns might also apply in the case of verbs, and
the role of linguistic context, especially argument structure, in the acquisition of verbs.

A central theme in many of the chapters is the comparison of the processes of noun and verb learning. Several contributors make provocative suggestions for constructing theories of lexical development that encompass the full range of lexical items that children learn and use.

Arvustused

"...a welcome look at the problem of first language verb-learning in young children....the papers cogently spell out the complexity of the verb-learner's problem and the variety of processes required to solve it. A number of interesting, counterintuitive, and often controversial claims emerge....there is a good deal of thematic coherence among subsets of the chapters, which makes reading all the more interesting by pointing out key issues and discrepant claims....a timely volume reporting some of the best current work on the problem of verb-learning in children." Studies in Second Language Acquisition

"...a stimulating collection of papers which not only provides an accurate reflection of the current state of the field, but also allows the reader to compare directly approaches which are more or less diametrically opposed." British Journal of Developmental Psychology

"This book presents many fascinating classic and innovative philosophies and empirical backgrounds designed to focus on longuistic and cognitive peculiarities of verb meaning acquisition." American Journal of Psychology

1 Introduction: Verbs Are Words Too
1(20)
William E. Merriman
Michael Tomasello
Part I Early Words for Action
2 Conceptual Development and the Child's Early Words for Events, Objects, and Persons
21(42)
Patricia Smiley
Janellen Huttenlocher
3 Names, Relational Words, and Cognitive Development in English and Korean Speakers: Nouns Are Not Always Learned Before Verbs
63(18)
Alison Gopnik
Soonja Choi
4 Differences in the Acquisition of Early Verbs: Evidence from Diary Data from Sisters
81(34)
Susan R. Braunwald
Part II Basic Principles of Verb Learning
5 Pragmatic Contexts for Early Verb Learning
115(32)
Michael Tomasello
6 Children's Disposition to Map New Words Onto New Referents
147(38)
William E. Merriman
John Marazita
Lorna Jarvis
7 Lexical Principles Can Be Extended to the Acquisition of Verbs
185(38)
Roberta Michnick Golinkoff
Kathy Hirsh-Pasek
Carolyn B. Mervis
William B. Frawley
Maria Parillo
8 The Dual Category Problem in the Acquisition of Action Words
223(28)
Katherine Nelson
9 Processes Involved in the Initial Mapping of Verb Meanings
251(26)
Douglas A. Bebrend
Part III The Role of Argument Structure
10 Verbs of a Feather Flock Together: Semantic Information in the Structure of Maternal Speech
277(22)
Anne Lederer
Henry Gleitman
Lila Gleitman
11 Syntactic Bootstrapping from Start to Finish with Special Reference to Down Syndrome
299(32)
Letitia G. Naigles
Anne Fowler
Atessa Helm
12 Missing Arguments and the Acquisition of Predicate Meanings
331(22)
Matthew Rispoli
13 Verb Argument Structure and the Problem of Avoiding an Overgeneral Grammar
353(24)
Martin D. S. Braine
Patricia J. Brooks
14 Hedgehogs, Foxes, and the Acquisition of Verb Meaning
377(28)
Michael Maratsos
Gedeon Deak
Author Index 405(8)
Subject Index 413
Michael Tomasello, William E. Merriman