Abstract

Word learning is complicated by referential ambiguity – there are often multiple potential targets for a newly-heard word. While typically developing (TD) children can accurately infer word meanings from cross-situational statistics, specific difficulties tracking word-object co-occurrences may contribute to language impairments in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Here, we investigate cross-situational word learning as an integrated system including mapping, retention, and generalisation in both typical development and autism. In Study 1, children with ASD were as accurate at disambiguating the meanings of novel words from statistical correspondences as TD controls matched on receptive vocabulary. In Study 2, both populations spontaneously utilised social and non-social attentional cues to facilitate and accelerate their mapping of word-referent relationships. Across Studies 1 and 2, both groups retrieved and generalised word-referent representations with impressive and comparable accuracy. Although children with ASD performed very similarly to TD children on measures of learning accuracy, they were significantly slower to identify correct referents under both cued and non-cued learning conditions. These findings indicate that mechanisms supporting cross-situational word learning, and the relationships between them, are not qualitatively atypical in language-delayed children with ASD. However, the increased time required to generate correct responses suggests that these mechanisms may be less efficient, potentially impacting learning in natural environments where visual and auditory stimuli are presented rapidly. Our data support claims that word learning in the longer term is driven by the gradual accumulation of word-object associations over multiple learning instances and could potentially inform the development of interventions designed to scaffold word learning.

Highlights

  • Word learning is of crucial importance to children's language acquisition (Patael & Diesendruck, 2008)

  • For typically developing (TD) children, a model containing only chronological age as a fixed effect provided the best fit to the observed data. These results indicate that TD children who were older were quicker to select the correct referent on retention and generalisation trials

  • Study 1 investigated cross-situational word learning as an integrated system, exploring the relationship between mapping, retention, and generalisation of novel labels in TD children and children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

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Summary

Introduction

Word learning is of crucial importance to children's language acquisition (Patael & Diesendruck, 2008). One way that children resolve this ambiguity is by learning across situations, aggregating data across naming events to form stable word-referent relationships (MacDonald, Yurovsky, & Frank, 2017; McMurray, Horst, & Samuelson, 2012; Saffran, Aslin, & Newport, 1996; Smith & Yu, 2008; Vlach & DeBrock, 2019). Children with ASD are often significantly delayed in their production of first words (Howlin, 2003), and approximately 25–30% have minimalto-no language during childhood (Anderson et al, 2007; Norrelgen et al, 2015; Rose, Trembath, Keen, & Paynter, 2016). We investigate whether cross-situational word learning is atypical in children with ASD, and how differences in this ability may affect lexical retention and generalisation

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