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The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning. / Cheung, Rachael W; Hartley, Calum; Monaghan, Padraic.
2020. Paper presented at 42nd Annual Virtual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Cheung, RW, Hartley, C & Monaghan, P 2020, 'The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning', Paper presented at 42nd Annual Virtual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 29/07/20 - 1/08/20.

APA

Cheung, R. W., Hartley, C., & Monaghan, P. (2020). The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning. Paper presented at 42nd Annual Virtual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society.

Vancouver

Cheung RW, Hartley C, Monaghan P. The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning. 2020. Paper presented at 42nd Annual Virtual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society.

Author

Bibtex

@conference{828c9f12ba1e41a489b8309f70cb27d0,
title = "The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning",
abstract = "Gesture is important for language acquisition, but how gesture and its temporal aspects integrate with other information is not fully known. We manipulated referential ambiguity, and the availability and timing of a deictic gesture during training on a word-learning task with adults to assess how gestural cues alter learning when tested on those words. We demonstrate that the presence of a gestural cue during training in a condition with two potential referents can reduce referential ambiguity sufficiently to produce performance at test similar to a condition with only one referent. We further show that learners demonstrate better performance at test with gestures that occur prior to, rather than after, the verbal label in training. Gesture during learning thus appears better at predicting, rather than confirming the referent. These results offer insight into how cues can facilitate the disambiguation of meaning during word learning.",
author = "Cheung, {Rachael W} and Calum Hartley and Padraic Monaghan",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "30",
language = "English",
note = "42nd Annual Virtual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, CogSci 2020 ; Conference date: 29-07-2020 Through 01-08-2020",
url = "https://cognitivesciencesociety.org/cogsci-2020/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The early cue catches the word: how gesture supports cross-situational word learning

AU - Cheung, Rachael W

AU - Hartley, Calum

AU - Monaghan, Padraic

PY - 2020/7/30

Y1 - 2020/7/30

N2 - Gesture is important for language acquisition, but how gesture and its temporal aspects integrate with other information is not fully known. We manipulated referential ambiguity, and the availability and timing of a deictic gesture during training on a word-learning task with adults to assess how gestural cues alter learning when tested on those words. We demonstrate that the presence of a gestural cue during training in a condition with two potential referents can reduce referential ambiguity sufficiently to produce performance at test similar to a condition with only one referent. We further show that learners demonstrate better performance at test with gestures that occur prior to, rather than after, the verbal label in training. Gesture during learning thus appears better at predicting, rather than confirming the referent. These results offer insight into how cues can facilitate the disambiguation of meaning during word learning.

AB - Gesture is important for language acquisition, but how gesture and its temporal aspects integrate with other information is not fully known. We manipulated referential ambiguity, and the availability and timing of a deictic gesture during training on a word-learning task with adults to assess how gestural cues alter learning when tested on those words. We demonstrate that the presence of a gestural cue during training in a condition with two potential referents can reduce referential ambiguity sufficiently to produce performance at test similar to a condition with only one referent. We further show that learners demonstrate better performance at test with gestures that occur prior to, rather than after, the verbal label in training. Gesture during learning thus appears better at predicting, rather than confirming the referent. These results offer insight into how cues can facilitate the disambiguation of meaning during word learning.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - 42nd Annual Virtual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society

Y2 - 29 July 2020 through 1 August 2020

ER -