Syntax And Communication Development In Infancy Flashcards

1
Q

Contents words composed of nouns, verbs, and adjective.

A

Open-class words

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2
Q

Function word as composed of preposition, conjunction, articles, pronouns, auxiliaries, and inflections.

A

Closed-class words

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3
Q

Dominated by use of open-class words (nouns, verbs, and adjuctive).

A

Telegraphic speech

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4
Q

In this stage children talk a great deal about objects, people, actions, and how they interrelate.

A

Semantic relations

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5
Q

Consistent word order.

A

Early grammer

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6
Q

The number of meaning encoded in the morpheme.

A

Semantic

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7
Q

The number of rules required for the morpheme.

A

Syntactic

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8
Q

a complex interaction of syntactic, semantic, and input factors (parents).

A

The development of negation

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9
Q

Are commonly the first questions asked by children.

A

What,where, and who

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10
Q

Come about later.

A

When, why, and how

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11
Q

Require more complex answers and contain more information.

A

Whose and which

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12
Q

require the understanding of primarprepositions which develop in early stage I speech.

A

To encode what, where, and who questions

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13
Q

children need to understand the concepts of manner, time, and causality, which are more abstract and develop later in life.

A

To encode how, when, and why questions

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14
Q

relatively rarely in English, to highlight the object of a sentence or the recipient of an action.

A

Passive

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15
Q

in which two (or more) complete sentences are conjoined.

A

sentential coordination

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16
Q

in which phrases within the sentence are conjoined.

A

phrasal coordination

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17
Q

is a unit of speech below a sentence in rank.

A

clause

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18
Q

are clauses starting with the relative pronouns: who, that, which, whose, where, when.

A

Relative clauses

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19
Q

A reflexive (himself) must be bound by a referent (Robert) that is within the same clause.

A

Principle A

20
Q

An anaphoric pronoun (him) cannot be bound by a referent within the same clause (Robert).

A

Principle B

21
Q

The ability of infants to recognize the sounds in their language is the first step to:
learning language, and recognize where each word starts and stops.

A

Segmentation

22
Q

The ability to pick up on the patterns among sounds, syllables, and words in a language.

A

Statistical learning

23
Q

By 12 months, infants can point at an object themselves and then shift their gaze to make eye contact with the listener, checking whether their points have been noticed.

A

joint attention

24
Q

used by children shortly before they begin learning conventional words form an interesting link between prelinguistic communication and speech.

A

Vocalizations

25
Q

Vocalizations that contain consistent sound patterns and are used in consistent situations (but are unique to the child rather than based on the adult language).

A

Pro-towards

26
Q

caregiver is instructed to play with the child in a natural way, and a trained observer scores the child’s behavior either during the session or from a video recording.

A

Low-structured observations

27
Q

one manipulates the situation somewhat to increase the likelihood of observing the behavior of interest.

A

Structured observation

28
Q

higher pitch, more variable pitch, more exaggerated stress.

A

Prosodic features

29
Q

babies in loving environments with healthy adult-infant attachment show greater expressive and receptive language skills.

A

Emotional component of IDS

30
Q

mothers speak in short, simple utterances, responding to what the infant does, and allowing their behavior to stand for a turn in the interaction.

A

3 months of age

31
Q

when babies begin to be more active partners in the interactions, mothers respond only to higher-quality vocalizations, such as a babbled sound, and not to sounds such as burps.

A

7 months of age

32
Q

mothers’ criteria for a turn had changed again, and they began to interpret their children’s vocalizations as words.

A

12 months of age

33
Q

important change occurs in infants’ social cognition. begin to understand that other people are intentional beings. have thoughts and goals. that there can be a sharing of minds They look in the direction of a point.

A

Around 9 months of age

34
Q

they even look in the direction that their caregiver looks (joint attention): Joint attention to objects while supplying their labels increases infants’ vocabulary fast.

A

Around 10 months

35
Q

style tries to redirect the child’s attention.

A

intrusive interactional

36
Q

recognize meaning of few well-known words.

A

6 months

37
Q

show robust comprehension of at least some spoken words. 12 months: know dozens of words.

A

8-10 months

38
Q

children often start to produce their first words. There is a great deal of variability in children’s early word comprehension, with some children reported to understand only 10–20 words, while others appear to understand more than 150 words.

A

Before 1 year of age

39
Q

know dozens of words.

A

12 months

40
Q

Break up, the fluent speech.

A

Segments

41
Q

Understand speakers meaning, and this require recognizing words not just sounds.

A

The underlaying goal of communication

42
Q

They can tell that there is a different way to say phoneme.

A

Categorically

43
Q

Remembering strings of sounds.

A

Phonological working memory

44
Q

Choosing where to direct their attention.

A

Selective attention

45
Q

Their ability to identify commonalities among objects.

A

Categorization