Author(s): López Pérez M; Moore C; Sander-Montant A; Byers-Heinlein K;
Assessing early vocabulary development commonly involves parent report methods and behavioral tasks like looking-while-listening. While both yield reliable aggregate scores, findings are mixed regarding their reliability in measuring infants' knowledge of individual words. Using archival data from 126 monolingual and bilingual 14-31-month-olds, we fur ...
Article GUID: 39639457
Author(s): Mitchell L; Tsui RK; Byers-Heinlein K;
Bilinguals need to learn two words for most concepts. These words are called translation equivalents, and those that also sound similar (e.g., banana-banane) are called cognates. Research has consistently shown that children and adults process and name cognates more easily than non-cognates. The present study explored if there is such an advantage for cog ...
Article GUID: 38087835
Author(s): Tsui RK; Gonzalez-Barrero AM; Schott E; Byers-Heinlein K;
The acquisition of translation equivalents is often considered a special component of bilingual children's vocabulary development, as bilinguals have to learn words that share the same meaning across their two languages. This study examined three contrasting accounts for bilingual children's acquisition of translation equivalents relative to singl ...
Article GUID: 35430556
Author(s): Smolak E; Hendrickson K; Zesiger P; Poulin-Dubois D; Friend M;
Early vocabulary knowledge and speed of word processing are important foundational skills for the development of preschool and school-age language and cognition. However, the variance in outcomes accounted for by parent-reported receptive or expressive vocabulary is generally modest. Recent research suggests that directly assessed, decontextualized vocabu ...
Article GUID: 33221662
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