Authors
Jasmine J Falk, Yayun Zhang, Matthias Scheutz, Chen Yu
Publication date
2021/7
Conference
43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2021)
Pages
1472-1478
Publisher
Cognitive Science Society
Description
Anaphora, a ubiquitous feature of natural language, poses a particular challenge to young children as they first learn language due to its referential ambiguity. In spite of this, parents and caregivers use anaphora frequently in child-directed speech, potentially presenting a risk to effective communication if children do not yet have the linguistic capabilities of resolving anaphora successfully. Through an eye-tracking study in a naturalistic free-play context, we examine the strategies that parents employ to calibrate their use of anaphora to their child's linguistic development level. We show that, in this way, parents are able to intuitively scaffold the complexity of their speech such that greater referential ambiguity does not hurt overall communication success.
Scholar articles
JJ Falk, Y Zhang, M Scheutz, C Yu - Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive …, 2021