1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910967171503321

Titolo

Approaches to bootstrapping [[electronic resource] ] : phonological,lexical, syntactic and neurophysiological aspects of early language acquisition . Volume 1 / / edited by Jurgen Weissenborn, Barbara Hohle

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., c2001

ISBN

9786612162534

9781282162532

1282162535

9789027298232

9027298238

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

xvii, 298 p

Collana

Language acquisition & language disorders, , 0925-0123 ; ; v. 23-24

Altri autori (Persone)

WeissenbornJurgen

HohleBarbara

Disciplina

401/.93

Soggetti

Language acquisition

Language awareness in children

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

APPROACHES TO BOOTSTRAPPING: VOLUME 1 -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Introduction -- Part I: Early Word Learning and its Prerequisites -- Bootstrapping from the Signal: Some further directions -- Contributions of Prosody to Infants' Segmentation and Representation of Speech -- Implicit Memory Support for Language Acquisition -- How Accessible is the Lexicon in Motherese? -- Bootstrapping a First Vocabulary -- Infants' Developing Competence in Recognizing and Understanding Words in Fluent Speech -- Lemma Structure in Language Learning: Comments on representation and realization -- Part II: From Input Cues to Syntactic Knowledge -- Signal to Syntax: Building a bridge -- A Reappraisal of Young Children's Knowledge of Grammatical Morphemes -- Predicting Grammatical Classes from Phonological Cues: An empirical test -- Pre-lexical Setting of the Head Complement Parameter through Prosody -- Discovering Word Order Regularities: The role of prosodic information for early parameter setting -- On the Prosody-Lexicon Interface in



Learning Word Order: A study of normally developing and language-impaired children -- Index -- LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND LANGUAGE DISORDERS (LALD).

Sommario/riassunto

Volume 1 of Approaches to Bootstrapping focuses on early word learning and syntactic development with special emphasis on the bootstrapping mechanisms by which the child using properties of the speech input enters the native linguistic system. Topics discussed in the area of lexical acquisition are: cues and mechanisms for isolating words in the input; special features of motherese and their role for early word learning; the determination of first word meanings; memory and related processing capacities in early word learning and understanding; and lexical representation and lexical access in early language production. The papers on syntactic development deal with the acquisition of grammatical prosodic features for learning language specific syntactic regularities.Volume 2 of Approaches to Bootstrapping focuses on the interaction between the development of prosodic and morphosyntactic knowledge as evidenced in the early speech of Dutch, English, German, Portugese, Spanish, Danish, Islandic, and Swedish children sheding new light on the relation between universal and language specific aspects of language acquisition. Another section of this volume deals with new approaches to language acquisition using ERP- techniques. The papers discuss in detail the relation between the development of language skills and changes in neurophysiological aspects of the brain. The potentials of these techniques for the development of new tools for an early diagnosis of children who are at risque for developmental language disorders are also pointed out. The closing section contains a synopsis of interactionist approaches to language acquisition, a discussion of the genetic and experiential origin of primitive linguistic elements in acquisition, and a discussion of structural and developmental aspects of bird song in comparison to human language. The two volumes

making up Approaches to Bootstrapping present a state-of-the art interdisciplinary and cross-linguistic overview of recent developments in first language acquisition research.