Submission 325
Word Learning in the Wild
SymposiumTalk-05
Presented by: Nicole Altvater-Mackensen
Reading picture books with toddlers is a common activity providing rich cues for language learning: shared reading fosters vocabulary growth and general language development (e.g., O’Farrelly et al., 2018). However, little is known how children use the rich input provided by natural reading for word learning.
The current study monitored toddlers’ attention during picture book reading using eye tracking glasses. A speaker presented a story book containing a novel character and a novel label, leading to a natural cross-situational word learning situation. Toddlers’ gaze was continuously tracked throughout reading to assess how much time toddlers spent looking at the book vs. the speaker’s face. Subsequently, toddlers’ learning of the novel word-object association was assessed in a preferential looking task (Fernald et al., 2008).
Results from 43 two- to four-year-olds indicate increased target looking after labelling for trials with familiar words (t(42)=4.9499, p<.01) and trials correctly labelling the novel object (t(42)=1.9957, p=.05), but not for trials in which the novel label was mispronounced or the novel referent altered (p<.2). This suggests that toddlers successfully learned the novel label-object association during shared reading with sufficient detail to detect manipulations in the phonological form of the label and the semantic form of the referent. Interestingly, toddlers’ general attention during book reading predicts target looking in correct trials (rs =.35, p=.02) while attention to the speaker’s face relates to target looking in mispronounced trials (rs =.38, p=.01) pointing to an association between phonological encoding and attention to visual speech information in natural word learning.