1989
DOI: 10.1016/0163-6383(89)90023-4
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Object knowledge and the emergence of language

Abstract: Infants' spontaneous play with objects was examined for evidence of developments in object knowledge in relation to the emergence of words and the single-word period in language development. Subjects were 7 girls and 7 boys, from different ethnic and economic backgrounds, who were studied longitudinally from 9 months to 26 months of age. Two types of displacements of objects in relation to one another were identified in the children's play: Separations and Constructions. The development of Constructions was as… Show more

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Cited by 121 publications
(144 citation statements)
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“…In this analysis and in the nouns-only analysis, described below, an inflection point anywhere between 20 and 90 words was accepted, because the vocabulary spurt is thought to occur at around 50 words. A minimum of 20 words was decided upon because many investigators agree that before 20 words is too early for a true spurt (e.g., Lifter & Bloom, 1989). A maximum of 90 was chosen because data from most of our participants ended at 90 words after the last 2 weeks of data were removed.…”
Section: Procedures For Testing For a Vocabulary Spurtmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this analysis and in the nouns-only analysis, described below, an inflection point anywhere between 20 and 90 words was accepted, because the vocabulary spurt is thought to occur at around 50 words. A minimum of 20 words was decided upon because many investigators agree that before 20 words is too early for a true spurt (e.g., Lifter & Bloom, 1989). A maximum of 90 was chosen because data from most of our participants ended at 90 words after the last 2 weeks of data were removed.…”
Section: Procedures For Testing For a Vocabulary Spurtmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These points typically converge at a time when children are between 18 and 20 months of age and have a productive lexicon of 50 to 100 words. This first substantive jump in vocabulary has also been correlated with a number of other cognitive advances, including categorization (Gopnik & Meltzoff, 1987), object play (Lifter & Bloom, 1989), and object permanence (Corrigan, 1978).…”
Section: Shape As a Factor In The Rate Of New Noun Acquisitions?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most global descriptions of early vocabulary growth report that for the majority of children, development proceeds from a slow and gradual increase in the number of new words produced to a faster and more noticeable increase (Bates, Bretherton, & Synder, 1988;Benedict, 1979;Dromi, 1987;Gershkoff-Stowe & Smith, 1997;Goldfield & Reznick, 1990;Gopnik & Meltzoff, 1987;Lifter & Bloom, 1989). This increased rate has been called the naming explosion or vocabulary spurt.…”
Section: Shape As a Factor In The Rate Of New Noun Acquisitions?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Play provides the child with opportunities for social interaction and social communication, as well as a context for constructing representations of intentional states and knowledge (Bloom, 1993;Lifter & Bloom, 1989, 1998Piaget, 1952). In typical development, functional, or pre-symbolic, play emerges during the first year, while symbolic play begins to emerge around 1 year of age and becomes increasingly complex over the second year of life.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%