Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Children" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Individual differences in empathy-related responses in early childhood: A person-centred approach Bullinger J; Christner N; Urian R; Kellermann CM; Beaulieu S; Steinbeis N; Dunfield KA; Paulus M; 41888065
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Parents Experiences and Clinicians Perceptions of Managing Cancer Pain in Young Children at Home Jibb LA; Hashemi E; Sivaratnam S; Hildenbrand AK; Nathan PC; Chartrand J; Alberts NM; Masama T; Pease HG; Torres LB; Cortes HG; Zworth M; Kuczynski S; Fortier MA; 41149458
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Mechanism of Injury and Clinical Recovery Outcomes Following Pediatric Concussion Gudymenko A; Iuliano SG; Gagnon IJ; Iverson GL; Cook NE; Zemek R; Teel EF; 40244878
SOH
4 5P Risk Classification Predicts Performance on Self-Reported but Not Objective Clinical Outcomes at 4-Weeks Post-Concussion in Children Teel E; Brossard-Racine M; Corbin-Berrigan LA; Gagnon I; 39988038
HKAP
5 Validating a Pragmatic Measure of Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) Delivery: Therapist Reports of EBP Strategy Delivery and Associations with Child Outcome Trajectories Lau AS; Lind T; Cox J; Motamedi M; Lui JHL; Chlebowski C; Flores A; Diaz D; Roesch S; Brookman-Frazee L; 39096408
PSYCHOLOGY
6 The perceived social support of parents having bipolar disorder impacts their children's mental health: a 10-year longitudinal study Trespalacios F; Boyle A; Serravalle L; Hodgins S; Ellenbogen MA; 39066987
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Optimism, pessimism, and physical health among youth: a scoping review Fairbank EJ; Borenstein-Laurie J; Alberts NM; Wrosch C; 38879445
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Cross-modal plasticity in children with cochlear implant: converging evidence from EEG and functional near-infrared spectroscopy Deroche MLD; Wolfe J; Neumann S; Manning J; Hanna L; Towler W; Wilson C; Bien AG; Miller S; Schafer E; Gemignani J; Alemi R; Muthuraman M; Koirala N; Gracco VL; 38846536
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Research as intervention? Exploring the health and well-being of children and youth facing global adversity through participatory visual methods D' Amico M; Denov M; Khan F; Linds W; Akesson B; 27043374
EDUCATION
10 Parental autonomy support in relation to preschool aged children's behavior: Examining positive guidance, negative control, and responsiveness Linkiewich D; Martinovich VV; Rinaldi CM; Howe N; Gokiert R; 33691509
EDUCATION
11 Psychometric Properties of a French Version of the Perceived Motor Competence in Childhood Questionnaire Maïano C; Morin AJS; April J; Tietjens M; St-Jean C; Gagnon C; Dreiskämper D; Aimé A; 33765895
PSYCHOLOGY
12 The more they hear the more they learn? Using data from bilinguals to test models of early lexical development Sander-Montant A; López Pérez M; Byers-Heinlein K; 37402336
PSYCHOLOGY
13 Computerized Cognitive Test Batteries for Children and Adolescents-A Scoping Review of Tools For Lab- and Web-Based Settings From 2000 to 2021 Tuerk C; Saha T; Bouchard MF; Booij L; 37259540
PSYCHOLOGY
14 Effects of the HEARTY exercise randomized controlled trial on eating behaviors in adolescents with obesity Alberga AS; Edache IY; Sigal RJ; von Ranson KM; Russell-Mayhew S; Kenny GP; Doucette S; Prud' homme D; Hadjiyannakis S; Cameron JD; Goldfield GS; 37034563
HKAP
15 Young people in Australia discuss strategies for preventing the normalisation of gambling and reducing gambling harm Pitt H; Thomas SL; Randle M; Cowlishaw S; Arnot G; Kairouz S; Daube M; 35549692
CONCORDIA
16 Indoor exposure to selected flame retardants and quantifying importance of environmental, human behavioral and physiological parameters Li Z; Zhang X; Wang B; Shen G; Zhang Q; Zhu Y; 35461943
CHEMBIOCHEM
17 Effects of language mixing on bilingual children's word learning Byers-Heinlein K; Jardak A; Fourakis E; Lew-Williams C; 35399292
PSYCHOLOGY
18 Changes in Youth Mental Health, Psychological Wellbeing, and Substance Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Rapid Review Zolopa C; Burack JA; O' Connor RM; Corran C; Lai J; Bomfim E; DeGrace S; Dumont J; Larney S; Wendt DC; 35252542
PSYCHOLOGY
19 Bilingual Language Development in Infancy: What Can We Do to Support Bilingual Families? Fibla L; Kosie JE; Kircher R; Lew-Williams C; Byers-Heinlein K; 35224184
CONCORDIA
20 Natural history and determinants of dysglycemia in Canadian children with parental obesity from ages 8-10 to 15-17 years: The QUALITY cohort Soren Harnois-Leblanc 35023257
PERFORM
21 Family Members' Perceptions of Their Psychological Responses One Year Following Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) Hospitalization: Qualitative Findings From the Caring Intensively Study Rennick JE; Knox AM; Treherne SC; Dryden-Palmer K; Stremler R; Chambers CT; McRae L; Ho M; Stack DM; Dougherty G; Fudge H; Campbell-Yeo M; 34557460
CONCORDIA
22 Reductions of Anxiety Symptoms, State Anxiety, and Anxious Arousal in Youth Playing the Videogame MindLight Compared to Online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Tsui TYL; DeFrance K; Khalid-Khan S; Granic I; Hollenstein T; 34403591
PSYCHOLOGY
23 Determinants of attrition in a pediatric healthy lifestyle intervention: The CIRCUIT program experience Danieles PK; Ybarra M; Van Hulst A; Barnett TA; Mathieu MÈ; Kakinami L; Drouin O; Bigras JL; Henderson M; 33608233
PERFORM
24 Resource-rational approach to meta-control problems across the lifespan Ruel A; Devine S; Eppinger B; 33590729
PERFORM
25 Pantomime (Not Silent Gesture) in Multimodal Communication: Evidence From Children's Narratives. Marentette P, Furman R, Suvanto ME, Nicoladis E 33329222
PSYCHOLOGY
26 Theory of mind development: State of the science and future directions. Poulin-Dubois D 32859285
PSYCHOLOGY
27 Glycemic extremes are related to cognitive dysfunction in children with type 1 diabetes: A meta-analysis He J; Ryder AG; Li S; Liu W; Zhu X; 29573221
PSYCHOLOGY
28 Behavioral Indices of Neuropsychological Processing Implicated in Moral Domain Reasoning amongst Children and Adolescents. Caravita SCS, Astrologo L, Biancardi G, Antonietti A 31757078
PSYCHOLOGY
29 Processing of Acoustic Information in Lexical Tone Production and Perception by Pediatric Cochlear Implant Recipients. Deroche MLD, Lu HP, Lin YS, Chatterjee M, Peng SC 31281237
PSYCHOLOGY
30 Health-related quality of life in post-infectious bronchiolitis obliterans: agreement between children and their proxy. Sarria EE, Mundstock E, Mocelin HT, Fischer GB, Torres RR, Garbin JGM, Leal LF, de F Arend MHR, Stein R, Booij L, de Araújo RMF, Mattiello R 31327498
PSYCHOLOGY
31 Parenting style and obesity risk in children. Kakinami L, Barnett TA, Séguin L, Paradis G 25797329
PERFORM
32 Parental Nutrition Knowledge Rather Than Nutrition Label Use Is Associated With Adiposity in Children. Kakinami L, Houle-Johnson S, McGrath JJ 27373860
PERFORM
33 Rhythm and Melody Tasks for School-Aged Children With and Without Musical Training: Age-Equivalent Scores and Reliability Ireland K; Parker A; Foster N; Penhune V; 29674984
PSYCHOLOGY
34 Predictors of Cigarette Smoking Initiation in Early, Middle, and Late Adolescence. O'Loughlin J, O'Loughlin EK, Wellman RJ, Sylvestre MP, Dugas EN, Chagnon M, Dutczak H, Laguë J, McGrath JJ 28318910
PERFORM

 

Title:The more they hear the more they learn? Using data from bilinguals to test models of early lexical development
Authors:Sander-Montant ALópez Pérez MByers-Heinlein K
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37402336/
DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105525
Publication:Cognition
Keywords:BilingualismChildrenInfantsLanguage experienceLooking-while-listeningMaturationWord learning
PMID:37402336 Category: Date Added:2023-07-04
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY

Description:

Children have an early ability to learn and comprehend words, a skill that develops as they age. A critical question remains regarding what drives this development. Maturation-based theories emphasise cognitive maturity as a driver of comprehension, while accumulator theories emphasise children's accumulation of language experience over time. In this study we used archival looking-while-listening data from 155 children aged 14-48 months with a range of exposure to the target languages (from 10% to 100%) to evaluate the relative contributions of maturation and experience. We compared four statistical models of noun learning: maturation-only, experience-only, additive (maturation plus experience), and accumulator (maturation times experience). The best-fitting model was the additive model in which both maturation (age) and experience were independent contributors to noun comprehension: older children as well as children who had more experience with the target language were more accurate and looked faster to the target in the looking-while-listening task. A 25% change in relative language exposure was equivalent to a 4 month change in age, and age effects were stronger at younger than at older ages. Whereas accumulator models predict that the lexical development of children with less exposure to a language (as is typical in bilinguals) should fall further and further behind children with more exposure to a language (such as monolinguals), our results indicate that bilinguals are buffered against effects of reduced exposure in each language. This study shows that continuous-level measures from individual children's looking-while-listening data, gathered from children with a range of language experience, provide a powerful window into lexical development.





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