4.3 Article

Phonological neighbourhoods in the developing lexicon

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD LANGUAGE
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 441-469

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0305000903005579

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Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD-37082, R01 HD037082] Funding Source: Medline

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Structural analyses of developing lexicons have provided evidence for both children's holistic lexical representations and sensitivity to phonetic segments. In the present investigation, neighbourhood analyses of two children's (age 3;6) expressive lexicons, maternal input, and an adult lexicon were conducted. In addition to raw counts and frequency-weighted counts, neighbourhood size was calculated as the proportion of the lexicon to which each target word is similar, to normalize for vocabulary size differences. These analyses revealed that children's lexicons contain more similar sounding words than previous analyses indicated. Further, neighbourhoods appear denser earlier in development relative to vocabulary size, presumably because children first learn words with more frequent sounds and sound combinations. Neighbourhood density as a proportion of the size of the lexicon then decreases over development as children acquire words with less frequent sounds and sound combinations. These findings suggest that positing fundamentally different lexical representations for children may be premature.

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