Dr. Kim Plunkett: CRLMB Distinguished Lecture Series
The CRLMB welcomes Dr. Kim Plunkett, who will present a Distinguished Lecture entitled "How infants build a semantic system:Â Lexical-semantic priming in early lexical development." Dr. Plunkett is a Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at Oxford University and Director of the Oxford BabyLab, a research facility for the experimental investigation of linguistic and cognitive development in babies and young children.
Abstract:
Several decades of research documents that infants as young as
12-months-old understand the meaning of many dozens of words
insofar as they are able identify an appropriate referent for a
word when given a choice between alternatives. The ability to
identify appropriate referents, given a label, develops rapidly
during the second year of life, so that by the time an infant
reaches her second birthday she may understand many hundreds of
words. Although we know a great deal about the types of words that
infants understand and produce during their second year – so-called
word-world relationships, surprisingly, we know virtually nothing
about their appreciation of the meaning relationships between words
themselves. These meaning relations lie at the heart of the human
semantic system: Part of knowing what the word ‘dog’ means involves
knowing, if only implicitly, how it relates to the meaning of ‘cat’
or ‘bone’. A proper understanding of semantic development involves
identification of how and when infants begin to link words together
in a network of meanings, thereby going beyond word-world
associations to achieve a system of meanings that underpins human
communication.
The investigation of the structure of the mental lexicon in adults
has relied heavily on priming studies: Words which prime each other
do so because they are linked together in the lexicon. We adopt a
similar strategy for investigating the structure of the infant
lexicon using an adaptation of the inter-modal preferential looking
task in which levels of lexical activation are indexed by visual
preference for a target over a distracter object under
linguistically primed versus unprimed conditions. The results of
our studies indicate that robust semantic/associative priming is in
place by 21–24 months-old whereas 18-month-olds fail to show clear
cut sensitivity to priming. Additional control experiments have
revealed that the locus of these priming effects are at the
lexical-semantic level, indicating that before infants reach their
second birthday they have already started to form
semantic/associative links between words in a fashion that begins
to resemble the structure of the adult lexicon.