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Face time: Effects of shyness and attention to faces on early word learning

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Face time: Effects of shyness and attention to faces on early word learning. / Hilton, Matt; Twomey, Katherine ; Westermann, Gert.
In: Language Development Research , Vol. 3, No. 1, 12.06.2023, p. 156-181.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Hilton M, Twomey K, Westermann G. Face time: Effects of shyness and attention to faces on early word learning. Language Development Research . 2023 Jun 12;3(1):156-181. doi: 10.34842/2023.652

Author

Hilton, Matt ; Twomey, Katherine ; Westermann, Gert. / Face time : Effects of shyness and attention to faces on early word learning. In: Language Development Research . 2023 ; Vol. 3, No. 1. pp. 156-181.

Bibtex

@article{f8c066389a174998adddd255419e3738,
title = "Face time: Effects of shyness and attention to faces on early word learning",
abstract = "Previous research has shown that shyness affects children{\textquoteright}s attention during the fast-mapping of novel words via disambiguation. The current study examined whether shyness also affects children{\textquoteright}s attention when eye-gaze cues to novel word meanings are present. 20- to 26-month-old children{\textquoteright}s (N = 31)gaze was recorded as they viewed videos in which an onscreen actor sat at a table on which one novel and two familiar objects appeared. The actor looked at and labeled one of the objects, using a novel word if the target object was novel. Overall, shyness was associated with a stronger preference for looking at the actor{\textquoteright}s face, and less time looking at the object being labeled. These effects did not differ when the target object was novel or familiar, suggesting that shyness is related to attentional differences during object labeling generally, rather than specific processes involved in the disambiguation of novel words.No evidence was found of a relation between retention and shyness or attention during labeling.",
keywords = "temperament, referent selection, retention, early childhood, eye-tracking",
author = "Matt Hilton and Katherine Twomey and Gert Westermann",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
day = "12",
doi = "10.34842/2023.652",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "156--181",
journal = "Language Development Research ",
issn = "2771-7976",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Face time

T2 - Effects of shyness and attention to faces on early word learning

AU - Hilton, Matt

AU - Twomey, Katherine

AU - Westermann, Gert

PY - 2023/6/12

Y1 - 2023/6/12

N2 - Previous research has shown that shyness affects children’s attention during the fast-mapping of novel words via disambiguation. The current study examined whether shyness also affects children’s attention when eye-gaze cues to novel word meanings are present. 20- to 26-month-old children’s (N = 31)gaze was recorded as they viewed videos in which an onscreen actor sat at a table on which one novel and two familiar objects appeared. The actor looked at and labeled one of the objects, using a novel word if the target object was novel. Overall, shyness was associated with a stronger preference for looking at the actor’s face, and less time looking at the object being labeled. These effects did not differ when the target object was novel or familiar, suggesting that shyness is related to attentional differences during object labeling generally, rather than specific processes involved in the disambiguation of novel words.No evidence was found of a relation between retention and shyness or attention during labeling.

AB - Previous research has shown that shyness affects children’s attention during the fast-mapping of novel words via disambiguation. The current study examined whether shyness also affects children’s attention when eye-gaze cues to novel word meanings are present. 20- to 26-month-old children’s (N = 31)gaze was recorded as they viewed videos in which an onscreen actor sat at a table on which one novel and two familiar objects appeared. The actor looked at and labeled one of the objects, using a novel word if the target object was novel. Overall, shyness was associated with a stronger preference for looking at the actor’s face, and less time looking at the object being labeled. These effects did not differ when the target object was novel or familiar, suggesting that shyness is related to attentional differences during object labeling generally, rather than specific processes involved in the disambiguation of novel words.No evidence was found of a relation between retention and shyness or attention during labeling.

KW - temperament

KW - referent selection

KW - retention

KW - early childhood

KW - eye-tracking

U2 - 10.34842/2023.652

DO - 10.34842/2023.652

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 156

EP - 181

JO - Language Development Research

JF - Language Development Research

SN - 2771-7976

IS - 1

ER -