Cabiddu, Francesco
2023.
The role of chunking and analogy in early vocabulary acquisition and processing.
PhD Thesis,
Cardiff University.
![]() Item availability restricted. |
Preview |
PDF
- Accepted Post-Print Version
Download (9MB) | Preview |
![]() |
PDF (Cardiff University Electronic Publication Form)
- Supplemental Material
Restricted to Repository staff only Download (3MB) |
Abstract
Chunking and analogy, learning through associations and similarities respectively, are crucial cognitive processes in a usage-based theory of language development. Assessing their roles in child naturalistic word learning has posed significant challenges. In this thesis, I offer methodological solutions to examine the developmental plausibility of these processes. Chapter 2 discusses limitations in studies of early word segmentation from naturalistic speech, affecting conclusions about the processes' developmental plausibility. I present a new chunking-based model, CLASSIC Utterance Boundary (CLASSIC-UB), to study how English infants discover words from continuous naturalistic speech. Its plausibility is assessed through new metrics focusing on child production vocabularies from large-scale conversational corpora. I show the advantages of using large word production samples and how this can improve the refinement of early word segmentation and learning theories. In Chapter 3, conclusions about CLASSIC-UB’s plausibility are supported by extending this approach cross-linguistically, using Italian as a case study. Across Chapters 2 and 3, CLASSIC-UB more accurately captures child productions than other chunking and non-chunking accounts, supporting its plausibility in early word segmentation and learning. In Chapter 4, I identify methodological challenges in assessing the independent effects of chunking and analogy in child word processing. I focus on how children use sentence context to resolve ambiguous word meanings (word sense disambiguation). I present ChiSense-12, a new open-access sense-tagged corpus of child-directed speech, and describe its use in creating experimental stimuli to disentangle variables (verb-object associations and verb-event structures) that are informative about the independent role of chunking and analogy. Using this corpus, I showed - for the first time - that 4-year-old children exploit both bottom-up verb-object associations and top-down verb-event structures to resolve lexical ambiguities. Overall, this thesis makes a significant contribution to usage-based theories of language development and improves our understanding of how children acquire language in real-life contexts.
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
---|---|
Date Type: | Completion |
Status: | Unpublished |
Schools: | Psychology |
Date of First Compliant Deposit: | 2 January 2024 |
Last Modified: | 03 Jan 2024 14:39 |
URI: | https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/165140 |
Actions (repository staff only)
![]() |
Edit Item |