skip to primary navigation skip to content

CBSU bibliography search


To request a reprint of a CBSU publication, please click here to send us an email (reprints may not be available for all publications)

The development of spoken word recognition: experimental and computational studies.
Authors:
Loucas, T. & MARSLEN-WILSON, W.D.
Reference:
In M.A. Gernsbacher & S.J. Derry (Eds) Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society . Mahwah, NJ:LEA
Year of publication:
1999
CBU number:
3882
Abstract:
Children's spoken word recognition is little understood compared to our knowledge of the adult system. We present here a combined experimental and computational exploration of the development of lexical access. Three accounts of the way children represent lexical form (Full-Specification, Radical Underspecification and Gradual Segmentation) are rejected in favour of one which derives from a connectionist approach. It sheds light on the pattern of results from two experiments investigating the way children, aged 5- to 9-years-old, process regular and irregular variation in the surface form of speech, which suggested, whilst children's lexical representations are functionally underspecified from at least 5-years-old, they are only beginning to track to viability of regular phonological variation at 9-years-old. The late acquisition of phonological inference is accounted for in a connectionist model in terms of the sparseness of the information relevant to learning this structural relationship in language.


genesis();