The use of nouns and verbs by Japanese children and their caregivers in book-reading and toy-playing contextsWe extend special thanks to all children and the parents who made this study possible. We would like to thank Yoshihiro Nishimitsu for his help on linguistic issues. This research was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan (Project numbers 08202207, 09207214, 10114214, 11111215, 1201211), Center of Developmental Education and Research and Sato Foundation.
OGURA, TAMIKO; DALE, PHILIP S.; YAMASHITA, YUKIE; MURASE, TOSHIKI; MAHIEU, AKI; OGURA TAMIKO; Kobe University; Kobe University; DALE PHILIP S.; University of Missouri-Columbia; YAMASHITA YUKIE; Shimane Prefectural Womenʼs College; MURASE TOSHIKI; Shimane University; MAHIEU AKI; Shimane Prefectural Womenʼs College
Журнал:
Journal of Child Language
Дата:
2006
Аннотация:
Japanese provides a valuable contrast for crosslinguistic studies of noun and verb dominance in early child language, and the effect of input on the early lexicon. In this study, 31 Japanese children between 1;0 and 2;0 and their caregivers were recorded in two contexts: joint bookreading and play with toys. Context had the largest effect, as nouns were much more frequent in the book context. Noun dominance was constant across development in the book context, but in the toy context there was a shift away as children developed from single words through the presyntactic stage to the syntactic stage. Caregiver language was verb dominant in a number of respects across development in the toy context, and thus was not closely related to child lexical balance. We conclude that in early lexical development, all children have a conceptual disposition to learn nouns. With vocabulary growth and the emergence of grammar, the proportion of verbs increases substantially, and at this stage properties of the input language may influence development.
141.0Кб