ABSTRACT Toddlers better retain novel object‐label mappings from taxonomic categories they have more knowledge of. Separately, words for concepts with more perceptual features are learned earlier than words for concepts… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT Toddlers better retain novel object‐label mappings from taxonomic categories they have more knowledge of. Separately, words for concepts with more perceptual features are learned earlier than words for concepts with fewer perceptual features. Because these factors have only been examined separately, it is unclear whether the effects of taxonomic density stem from differences in structured taxonomic knowledge or simply reflect lower‐level differences in perceptual similarity among concepts. We asked how taxonomic structure and perceptual information jointly contribute to word learning at 24 months old in an ostensive word learning task. We found that semantic category knowledge facilitated word learning. We also found that the availability of perceptual features served as additional supports for word learning by children with smaller expressive vocabularies. This indicates that structured taxonomic knowledge is a better predictor of word learning compared to lower‐level perceptual features at 24 months old. However, perceptual cues may provide additional support for vocabulary growth at the start of development. Summary We explore how semantic category knowledge and perceptual features jointly influence novel word learning at 24 months old in an ostensive word learning context. Novel word learning was facilitated within semantic categories the toddlers knew more about, when controlling for the availability of perceptual information. Toddlers with smaller productive vocabularies used perceptual features as additional supports for word learning, but those with larger vocabularies did not. These findings show that structured taxonomic knowledge is a better predictor of word learning at 24 months old compared to lower‐level perceptual information.
               
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