1. Do children go for the nice guys? The influence of speaker benevolence and certainty on selective word learning
- Author
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Bergstra, M., De Mulder, Hannah, Coopmans, P.H.A., LS Nederlandse taalkunde, LS Taalverwerving, ILS Acquisition, LS Nederlandse taalkunde, LS Taalverwerving, and ILS Acquisition
- Subjects
Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Vocabulary ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Nice ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,speaker certainty ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Memory ,Speaker benevolence ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Language development ,word learning ,Child ,Word learning ,General Psychology ,media_common ,computer.programming_language ,speaker benevolence ,05 social sciences ,Indo-European languages ,Speaker certainty ,Beneficence ,Certainty ,Language acquisition ,Preference ,Linguistic competence ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,computer ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
This study investigated how speaker certainty (a rational cue) and speaker benevolence (an emotional cue) influence children's willingness to learn words in a selective learning paradigm. In two experiments four- to six-year-olds learnt novel labels from two speakers and, after a week, their memory for these labels was reassessed. Results demonstrated that children retained the label–object pairings for at least a week. Furthermore, children preferred to learn from certain over uncertain speakers, but they had no significant preference for nice over nasty speakers. When the cues were combined, children followed certain speakers, even if they were nasty. However, children did prefer to learn from nice and certain speakers over nasty and certain speakers. These results suggest that rational cues regarding a speaker's linguistic competence trump emotional cues regarding a speaker's affective status in word learning. However, emotional cues were found to have a subtle influence on this process.
- Published
- 2018