CogSci 2025

August 01, 2025

San Francisco, United States

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keywords:

cognitive development

learning

psychology

language acquisition

knowledge representation

Word meanings are rarely transparent from their extralinguistic contexts. How children learn words from an input with “low-informative” (LI) events is of interest because even adults struggle to learn from LI events (Gleitman & Trueswell, 2020; Medina et al., 2011). This study revisited LI events’ contribution to learning by probing what can be gleaned from LI events even if they don’t yield exact meanings. Adults (N = 120) learned words (e.g., “modi”) that had English meanings (e.g., “apple”) from LI events. Participants then both guessed the word’s exact meaning and rated several candidate meanings. Although LI events failed to yield accurate mappings of meanings, they led to representations (derived via the ratings) that were semantically aligned with those of the true meanings. These results highlight the potential for LI events to get learning off the ground and the implications of viewing word learning as more than a mapping problem.

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Who and when gets the race? Two processing routes for the advantages and penalties of pronominal ambiguity resolution

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Ruoqing Yao and 1 other author

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