2021
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/xw9e7
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Some puzzling findings regarding the acquisition of verbs

Abstract: On the whole, children acquire frequent words earlier than less frequent words. However, there are other factors at play, such as an early "noun bias" (relative to input frequency, toddlers learn nouns faster than verbs) and a "content-word bias" (content words are acquired disproportionately to function words). This paper follows up reports of a puzzling phenomenon within verb-learning, where "experiencer-object" emotion verbs (A frightened/angered/delighted B) are lower frequency but learned earlier than "ex… Show more

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“…The noun-bias hypothesis is the term that is used to describe this phenomenon. As described by the noun-bias theory, children tend to acquire nouns faster than other words (Chai et al, 2021;Gentner, 1982;Hartshorne et al, 2021). Objects (things) are more readily learnt by children than actions or conditions, which explains this trend.…”
Section: Figure 2 the Acquisition Of Word Classesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The noun-bias hypothesis is the term that is used to describe this phenomenon. As described by the noun-bias theory, children tend to acquire nouns faster than other words (Chai et al, 2021;Gentner, 1982;Hartshorne et al, 2021). Objects (things) are more readily learnt by children than actions or conditions, which explains this trend.…”
Section: Figure 2 the Acquisition Of Word Classesmentioning
confidence: 99%