Search publications

Reset filters Search by keyword

No publications found.

 

Keeping an Eye on Looking Measures: Towards More Robust Developmental Methods

Author(s): Sander-Montant A; Fibla L; Killam H; Byers-Heinlein K;

A persistent challenge in experimental developmental psychology is determining which of many possible outcome measures best captures underlying behaviors and processes. In the looking-while-listening paradigm for studying early word comprehension, researchers have developed more than 12 distinct outcome measures, but have limited empirical basis for cho ...

Article GUID: 42206598


Infants' Knowledge of Individual Words: Investigating Links Between Parent Report and Looking Time

Author(s): López Pérez M; Moore C; Sander-Montant A; Byers-Heinlein K;

Assessing early vocabulary development commonly involves parent report methods and behavioral tasks like looking-while-listening. While both yield reliable aggregate scores, findings are mixed regarding their reliability in measuring infants' knowledge of individual words. Using archival data from 126 monolingual and bilingual 14-31-month-olds, we f ...

Article GUID: 39639457


Like mother like child: Differential impact of mothers' and fathers' individual language use on bilingual language exposure

Author(s): Sander-Montant A; Bissonnette R; Byers-Heinlein K;

Language exposure is an important determiner of language outcomes in bilingual children. Family language strategies (FLS, e.g., one-parent-one-language) were contrasted with parents' individual language use to predict language exposure in 4-31-month-old children (50% female) living in Montreal, Quebec. Two-hundred twenty one children (primarily Euro ...

Article GUID: 39575856


The more they hear the more they learn? Using data from bilinguals to test models of early lexical development

Author(s): Sander-Montant A; López Pérez M; Byers-Heinlein K;

Children have an early ability to learn and comprehend words, a skill that develops as they age. A critical question remains regarding what drives this development. Maturation-based theories emphasise cognitive maturity as a driver of comprehension, while accumulator theories emphasise children's accumulation of language experience over time. In thi ...

Article GUID: 37402336


-   Page 1 / 1   -