ICPS
2019 International Convention of Psychological Science
The Origins of Language in the Child: Functional Categories Are Foundational Primitives in Language Acquisition
Functional categories are grammatical categories in language that carry a critical role in establishing the structural skeleton of sentences and enabling essential syntactic operations. This symposium explores cross-linguistic evidence suggesting that the acquisition of language, which begins long before the child’s first words, includes early, continuous access to functional categories.
Chairs & Discussants
- Barbara LustChair
Cornell University
Presentations
- An Overview of Recent Advancements in the Cross-Linguistic Research on Functional Categories in Early Child LanguageCristina Dye
- Early Sensitivity to Function Words Drives Sentence Computation and Noun Reference in Both Monolinguals and BilingualsYarden Kedar
- When Syntax Meets Vocabulary: An Investigation of Function Word Acquisition across AgeMonica Barbir
- Infants Use Function Words to Infer the Probable Meaning of Novel Words.Mireille Babineau