Early Event Understanding Predicts Later Verb Comprehension and Motion Event Lexicalization

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Date

2019

Authors

Aktan-Erciyes, Aslı
Göksun, Tilbe

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Amer Psychologıcal Assoc

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

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OpenAIRE Views

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No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Average
Popularity
Top 10%

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Abstract

Before infants produce words, they can discriminate changes in motion event components such as manner (how an action is performed) and path (trajectory of an action). Individual differences in nonlinguistic event categorization are related to children's later verb comprehension (Konishi, Stahl, Golinkoff, & Hirsh-Pasek, 2016). We asked: (a) Do infants learning Turkish, a verb-framed language, attend to both manner and path changes in motion events? (b) Is early detection of path and manner related to children's later verb comprehension and (c) how they describe motion events? Thirty-two Turkish-reared children were tested at three time points. At Time 1, infants (M-age = 14.5 months) were tested on their detection of changes in path and manner using the Preferential Looking Paradigm. At Time 2, children were tested on their receptive language skills (M-age = 22.07 months). At Time 3, children performed 3 tasks (M-age = 35.05 months): a verb comprehension task, an event description task depicting motion events with different path and manner combinations, and an expressive language task. The ability to detect changes in event components at Time 1 predicted verb comprehension abilities at Time 3, beyond general receptive and expressive vocabulary skills at Times 2 and 3. Infants who noticed changes in path and manner at Time 1 used fewer manner-only descriptions and more path-any descriptions (i.e., descriptions that included a path component with or without manner) in their speech at Time 3. These findings suggest that early detection of event components is associated not only with verb comprehension, but also with how children lexicalize event components in line with their native language.

Description

Keywords

Event conceptualization, Verb learning, Motion event lexicalization, Relational words, Male, Psycholinguistics, Motion event lexicalization, Verb learning, Motion Perception, Relational words, Infant, Language Development, Vocabulary, Child, Preschool, Event conceptualization, Humans, Learning, Female, Comprehension, Follow-Up Studies

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
11

Source

Developmental Psychology

Volume

55

Issue

11

Start Page

2249

End Page

2262
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Citations

CrossRef : 8

Scopus : 10

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Mendeley Readers : 29

SCOPUS™ Citations

10

checked on Feb 12, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

10

checked on Feb 12, 2026

Page Views

7

checked on Feb 12, 2026

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2.00240569

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