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Semantics of the transitive construction: prototype effects and developmental comparisons.

Authors :
Ibbotson P
Theakston AL
Lieven EV
Tomasello M
Source :
Cognitive science [Cogn Sci] 2012 Sep-Oct; Vol. 36 (7), pp. 1268-88. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 May 16.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

This paper investigates whether an abstract linguistic construction shows the kind of prototype effects characteristic of non-linguistic categories, in both adults and young children. Adapting the prototype-plus-distortion methodology of Franks and Bransford (1971), we found that whereas adults were lured toward false-positive recognition of sentences with prototypical transitive semantics, young children showed no such effect. We examined two main implications of the results. First, it adds a novel data point to a growing body of research in cognitive linguistics and construction grammar that shows abstract linguistic categories can behave in similar ways to non-linguistic categories, for example, by showing graded membership of a category. Thus, the findings lend psychological validity to the existing cross-linguistic evidence for prototypical transitive semantics. Second, we discuss a possible explanation for the fact that prototypical sentences were processed differently in adults and children, namely, that children's transitive semantic network is not as interconnected or cognitively coherent as adults'.<br /> (Copyright © 2012 Cognitive Science Society, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1551-6709
Volume :
36
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cognitive science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22591052
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1551-6709.2012.01249.x