Abstract

While recent research suggests that toddlers tend to learn word meanings with many “perceptual” features that are accessible to the toddler’s sensory perception, it is not clear whether and how building a lexicon with perceptual connectivity supports attention to and recognition of word meanings. We explore this question in 24–30-month-olds (N = 60) in relation to other individual differences, including age, vocabulary size, and tendencies to maintain focused attention. Participants’ looking to item pairs with high vs. low perceptual connectivity—defined as the number of words in a child’s lexicon sharing perceptual features with the item—was measured before and after target item labeling. Results revealed pre-labeling attention to known items is biased to both high- and low-connectivity items: first to high, and second, but more robustly, to low-connectivity items. Subsequent object–label processing was also facilitated for high-connectivity items, particularly for children with temperamental tendencies to maintain focused attention. This work provides the first empirical evidence that patterns of shared perceptual features within children’s known vocabularies influence both visual and lexical processing, highlighting the potential for a newfound set of developmental dependencies based on the perceptual/sensory structure of early vocabularies.

Highlights

  • Does a toddler’s knowledge of and attention to the subcomponents of word meanings influence lexicosemantic processing? Research on adults suggests the answer is “yes”

  • We conducted three sets of parallel analyses on two predefined time windows of 1500 ms in duration: (1) the pre-labeling period and (2) on the pre-registered post-labeling test period (300 to 1800 ms post-label onset)—corresponding with time windows used in other studies of infant known-word recognition (e.g., [44,45])

  • To explore whether connectivity interacted with age, vocabulary percentile, or focused attention skill, we conducted (1) planned analyses of mean looking times across the time windows and (2) exploratory analyses of the latency and duration of first looks to high- vs. low-connectivity items

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Summary

Objectives

We aim to explore the effects of a word’s perceptual connectivity on lexical processing, and the effects of connectivity-driven attentional biases pre-labeling. The primary goal of this project is to explore how the perceptual connectivity of familiar objects influences patterns of pre-labeling attentional biases and subsequent word processing

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