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Shifting senses in lexical semantic development
Authors:Hugh Rabagliati  Gary F. Marcus  Liina Pylkkänen
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, New York University, 6 Washington Place, New York, NY 10003, United States;2. Department of Linguistics, New York University, 10 Washington Place, New York, NY 10009, United States;1. National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russian Federation;2. Moscow Research Institute of Psychiatry, Moscow, Russian Federation;3. Graduate School for the Humanities, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands;4. VA Northern California Health Care System, University of California, Davis, CA, USA;1. University of Helsinki and University of Oulu, Finland;2. University of Turku, Finland;3. Turku University Hospital, Finland;4. Helsinki University Hospital and University of Helsinki, Finland;5. Turku University Hospital and University of Turku, Finland;1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139, United States;2. Center for Advanced Computation and Telecommunications, University of Massachusetts Lowell, 1 University Ave., Lowell, MA 01854, United States;1. Temple University, 1701 North 13th St., Philadelphia, PA 19122, United States;2. University of Chicago, 5848 S. University Ave., Chicago, IL 60637, United States
Abstract:Most words are associated with multiple senses. A DVD can be round (when describing a disc), and a DVD can be an hour long (when describing a movie), and in each case DVD means something different. The possible senses of a word are often predictable, and also constrained, as words cannot take just any meaning: for example, although a movie can be an hour long, it cannot sensibly be described as round (unlike a DVD). Learning the scope and limits of word meaning is vital for the comprehension of natural language, but poses a potentially difficult learnability problem for children. By testing what senses children are willing to assign to a variety of words, we demonstrate that, in comprehension, the problem is solved using a productive learning strategy. Children are perfectly capable of assigning different senses to a word; indeed they are essentially adult-like at assigning licensed meanings. But difficulties arise in determining which senses are assignable: children systematically overestimate the possible senses of a word, allowing meanings that adults rule unlicensed (e.g., taking round movie to refer to a disc). By contrast, this strategy does not extend to production, in which children use licensed, but not unlicensed, senses. Children’s productive comprehension strategy suggests an early emerging facility for using context in sense resolution (a difficult task for natural language processing algorithms), but leaves an intriguing question as to the mechanisms children use to learn a restricted, adult-like set of senses.
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