Abstract

Verbs are central to the syntactic structure of sentences, and, thus, important for learning one’s native language. This study examined how children visually inspect events as they hear, and do not hear, a new verb. Specifically, there is evidence that children may focus on the agent of the action or may prioritize attention to the action being performed; to date, little evidence is available. This study used an eye tracker to track 2-, 3-, and 4-year-olds’ looking to the agent (i.e., face) vs. action (i.e., hands) while viewing events linked to a new verb as well as distractor events. A Tobii X30 eye tracker recorded children’s fixations to AOIs (head/face and hands) as they watched three target events and two distractor events in different orders during the learning phase, and pointed to one of two events in two test trials. This was repeated for a second novel verb. Pointing results show that children in all age groups were able to learn and extend the new verbs to new events at test. Additionally, across age groups, when viewing target events, children increased their looking to the hands (where the action is taking place) as those trials progressed and decreased their looking to the agents’ face, which is less informative for learning a new verb’s meaning. In contrast, when viewing distractor events, children decreased their looking to hands over trials and maintained their attention to the face. In summary, children’s visual attention to agents’ faces and hands differed depending on whether the events cooccurred with the new verb. These results are important as this is the first study to show this pattern of visual attention during verb learning, and, thus, these results help reveal underlying attentional strategies children may use when learning verbs.

Highlights

  • Verbs are central to the syntactic structure of sentences

  • By tracking looking to target and distractor events, these results will reveal whether children adjust their visual attention to agents or their actions differently depending on whether the event is linked to a new verb, which is important for understanding how they may be processing events during verb learning

  • There was a significant effect of Order in the 3-year-old group, with Order, F (2, 30) = 4.25, p < 0.05, η2 = 0.23; pairwise comparisons with Sidak corrections show that children in the Distractor first (DTTDT) condition were significantly less successful at test than were children in the Alternating condition (TDTDT)

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Summary

Introduction

Verbs are central to the syntactic structure of sentences. A controversy in this area is whether children focus on the agent of the action or the action being performed, and to what extent they focus on each one. Children seem to be attending to actions [3] or results, e.g., [4,5]. In everyday contexts, children often see events linked to a new verb that are interspersed with distracting events. Most laboratory studies of verb learning show children relevant events as they hear the new verb. The present study is important because few studies have tracked children’s looking patterns during verb learning, and few studies have included distracting interleaved events. By tracking looking to target and distractor events, these results will reveal whether children adjust their visual attention to agents (faces) or their actions (hands) differently depending on whether the event is linked to a new verb, which is important for understanding how they may be processing events during verb learning

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