(Press-News.org) EVANSTON, Ill. --- Researchers are digging deeper into whether infants' ability to learn new words is shaped by the particular language being acquired.
A new Northwestern University study cites a promising new research agenda aimed at bringing researchers closer to discovering the impact of different languages on early language and cognitive development.
For decades, researchers have asked why infants learn new nouns more rapidly and more easily than new verbs. Many researchers have asserted that the early advantage for learning nouns over verbs is a universal feature of human language.
In contrast, other researchers have argued that early noun-advantage is not a universal feature of human language but rather a consequence of the particular language being acquired.
Sandra Waxman, lead author of the study and Louis W. Menk Professor of Psychology at Northwestern, shows in her research that even before infants begin to produce many verbs in earnest, infants acquiring either noun-friendly or verb-friendly languages already appreciate the concepts underlying both noun and verb meaning.
In all languages examined to date, researchers see a robust ability to map nouns to objects, Waxman said, but when it comes to mapping verbs to events, infants' performance is less robust and more variable. Their ability to learn new verbs varied not only as a function of the native language being acquired, but also with the particular linguistic context in which the verb was presented.
Based on new evidence, a shift in the research agenda is necessary, according to Waxman and her colleagues.
"We now know that by 24 months infants acquiring distinctly different languages can successfully map novel nouns to objects and novel verbs to event categories," Waxman said. "It is essential that we shift the research focus to include infants at 24 months and younger, infants who are engaged in the very process of acquiring distinctly different native languages."
Waxman said the implications are clear. "Rather than characterizing languages as either 'noun friendly' or 'verb friendly,' it would be advantageous to adopt a more nuanced treatment of the syntactic, semantic, morphologic and pragmatic properties of each language and the consequences of these properties on infants' acquisition of linguistic structure and meaning."
###
In addition to Waxman, co-authors include Xiaolan Fu, Sudha Arunachalam, Erin Leddon and Kathleen Geraghty. The article "Nouns before verbs? Fresh insights and new cross-linguistic evidence" will appear online in the next issue of Child Development Perspectives.
NORTHWESTERN NEWS: http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/
Nouns before verbs?
New research agenda could help shed light on early language, cognitive development
2013-03-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
UW researchers discover the brain origins of variation in pathological anxiety
2013-03-26
Madison, Wis. — New findings from nonhuman primates suggest that an overactive core circuit in the brain, and its interaction with other specialized circuits, accounts for the variability in symptoms shown by patients with severe anxiety. In a brain-imaging study to be published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health describe work that for the first time provides an understanding of the root causes of clinical variability in anxiety disorders.
Using a ...
MRI shows brain abnormalities in migraine patients
2013-03-26
OAK BROOK, Ill. – A new study suggests that migraines are related to brain abnormalities present at birth and others that develop over time. The research is published online in the journal Radiology.
Migraines are intense, throbbing headaches, sometimes accompanied by nausea, vomiting and sensitivity to light. Some patients experience auras, a change in visual or sensory function that precedes or occurs during the migraine. More than 300 million people suffer from migraines worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.
Previous research on migraine patients ...
DNA says lemur lookalikes are 2 new species
2013-03-26
DURHAM, N.C. -- Scientists have identified two new species of mouse lemur, the saucer-eyed, teacup-sized primates native to the African island of Madagascar.
The new study brings the number of recognized mouse lemur species to 20, making them the most diverse group of lemurs known. But because these shy, nocturnal primates look so much alike, it's only possible to tell them apart with genetic sequencing.
The new mouse lemurs weigh 2.5 to 3 ounces (about 65 to 85 grams) and have grey-brown fur. "You can't really tell them apart just looking at them through binoculars ...
Microorganisms detected via breath test linked to body mass, fat accumulation
2013-03-26
Chevy Chase, MD ––The content of a person's breath may indicate how susceptible they are to weight gain, according to a recent study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM).
People whose breath has high concentrations of both hydrogen and methane gases are more likely to have a higher body mass index and percentage of body fat, according to the findings. The combination of the two gases signals the presence of a microorganism that may contribute to obesity.
A person exhales larger amounts of hydrogen ...
New model may pinpoint timing of final menstrual period
2013-03-26
Chevy Chase, MD ––For women enduring hot flashes and other symptoms of menopause, a new model could better estimate the timing of the final menstrual period, according to a recent study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM).
Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) developed a formula using the levels of two hormones to estimate when the final menstrual period would occur. The calculation relies on changing levels of estradiol, a hormone present in the ovary, and follicle stimulating ...
Vitamin D benefits breathing in tuberculosis patients
2013-03-26
Chevy Chase, MD ––Maintaining adequate levels of vitamin D can help people breathe better and may even protect against tuberculosis (TB), according to a recent study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM).
The study of more than 10,000 Korean adults found that lung function improved when people had absorbed more vitamin D into their bodies. Vitamin D is absorbed primarily through sunlight, with a healthy diet as a secondary source.
Without enough vitamin D to aid calcium absorption, children and adults ...
Moffitt Cancer Center researchers design small molecule to disrupt cancer-causing protein
2013-03-26
Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center and colleagues at the University of South Florida have developed a small molecule that inhibits STAT3, a protein that causes cancer. This development could impact the treatment of several tumor types, including breast, lung, prostate and others that depend on STAT3 for survival.
The study appeared in the Jan. 15 online issue of Cancer Research, a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research.
"STAT3 has been associated with poor prognosis and resistance to chemotherapy in patients with cancer," explained Said M. Sebti, ...
Philadelphia shifts to a Northern accent
2013-03-26
(Washington, DC) – The traditional Southern inflections associated with the Philadelphia regional accent are increasingly being displaced by Northern influences. A recent study supported by the National Science Foundation documents this trend through an analysis of Philadelphia neighborhood speech patterns over more than a century. The study, "A Hundred Years of Sound Change," to be published in the March 2013 issue of the scholarly journal Language, is authored by University of Pennsylvania linguists William Labov, Ingrid Rosenfelder and Josef Fruehwald.
Labov and his ...
Cedars-Sinai study: Obesity may be linked to microorganisms living in the gut
2013-03-26
LOS ANGELES — (EMBARGOED UNTIL 12 A.M. EST ON MARCH 26, 2013) – How much a person eats may be only one of many factors that determines weight gain. A recent Cedars-Sinai study suggests that a breath test profile of microorganisms inhabiting the gut may be able to tell doctors how susceptible a person is to developing obesity.
The study, published online Thursday by The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, shows that people whose breath has high concentrations of both hydrogen and methane gasses are more likely to have a higher body mass ...
Bankruptcy Options: Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13
2013-03-26
Bankruptcy options: Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13
Article provided by Mark T. Young & Associates
Visit us at http://www.marktyoung.com
Most people in Tennessee are aware of bankruptcy to some degree or another, and many know that it can provide a fresh start for individuals who find themselves unable to get out of debt as a result of job loss, illness or other financial difficulty. What many people do not know, however, is that bankruptcy is far from one-size-fits-all. In fact, there different types of bankruptcy for different situations, each with its own set of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
SwRI upgrades nuclear magnetic resonance laboratory for pharmaceutical R&D
House sparrows in northern Norway can help us save other endangered animals
Crohn's & Colitis Foundation survey reveals more than 1/3 of young adults with IBD face step therapy insurance barriers
Tethered UAV autonomous knotting on environmental structures for transport
Decentralized social media platforms unlock authentic consumer feedback
American Pediatric Society announces Vanderbilt University School of Medicine as host institution for APS Howland Visiting Professor Program
Scientists discover first method to safely back up quantum information
A role for orange pigments in birds and human redheads
Pathways to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions for Southeast Asia
A JBNU–KIMS collaborative study on a cost-effective alloy matches superalloys for power plants and energy infrastructure
New study overturns long-held model of how plants coordinate immune responses.
New AI model predicts disease risk while you sleep
Scientists discover molecular ‘reshuffle’ and crack an 80-year-old conundrum
How stressors during pregnancy impact the developing fetal brain
Electrons lag behind the nucleus
From fungi to brain cells: one scientist's winding path reveals how epigenomics shapes neural destiny
Schizophrenia and osteoporosis share 195 genetic loci, highlighting unexpected biological bridges between brain and bone
Schizophrenia-linked genetic variant renders key brain receptor completely unresponsive to both natural and therapeutic compounds
Innovative review reveals overlooked complexity in cellular energy sensor's dual roles in Alzheimer's disease
Autism research reframed: Why heterogeneity is the data, not the noise
Brazil's genetic treasure trove: supercentenarians reveal secrets of extreme human longevity
The (metabolic) cost of life
CFRI special issue call for papers: New Frontiers in Sustainable Finance
HKU Engineering scholar demonstrates the smallest all-printed infrared photodetectors to date
Precision empowerment for brain "eavesdropping": CAS team develops triple-electrode integrated functional electrode for simultaneous monitoring of neural signals and chemical transmitters during sleep
Single-capillary endothelial dysfunction resolved by optoacoustic mesoscopy
HKU three research projects named among ‘Top 10 Innovation & Technology News in Hong Kong 2025’ showcasing excellence in research and technology transfer
NLRSeek: A reannotation-based pipeline for mining missing NLR genes in sequenced genomes
A strand and whole genome duplication–aware collinear gene identification tool
Light storage in light cages: A revolutionary approach to on-chip quantum memories
[Press-News.org] Nouns before verbs?New research agenda could help shed light on early language, cognitive development