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Twelve-month-olds disambiguate new words using mutual-exclusivity inferences
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Twelve-month-olds disambiguate new words using mutual-exclusivity inferences
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Electrophysiological investigation of infants’ understanding of understanding
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Electrophysiological investigation of infants' understanding of understanding
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In: ISSN: 1878-9293 ; EISSN: 1878-9307 ; Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02868065 ; Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, Elsevier, 2020, 43, pp.100783. ⟨10.1016/j.dcn.2020.100783⟩ (2020)
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Electrophysiological Investigation of Infants’ Understanding of Understanding
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Abstract:
Social cognition might play a critical role in language acquisition and comprehension, as mindreading may be necessary to infer the intended meaning of linguistic expressions uttered by communicative partners. In three electrophysiological experiments, we explored the interplay between belief attribution and language comprehension of 14-month-old infants. First, we replicated our earlier finding: infants produced an N400 effect to correctly labelled objects when the labels did not match a communicative partner’s beliefs about the referents. Second, we observed no N400 when we replaced the object with another category member. Third, when we named the objects incorrectly for infants, but congruently with the partner’s false belief, we observed large N400 responses, suggesting that infants retained their own perspective in addition to that of the partner. We thus interpret the observed social N400 effect as a communicational expectancy indicator because it was contingent not on the attribution of false beliefs but on semantic expectations by both the self and the communicative partner. Additional exploratory analyses revealed an early, frontal, positive-going electrophysiological response in all three experiments, which was contingent on infants’ computing the comprehension of the social partner based on attributed beliefs.
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URL: https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/143125/1/Authors_Manuscript_Accepted.pdf https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/143125/ https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2020.100783
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Fourteen-Month-Old Infants Track the Language Comprehension of Communicative Partners
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Fourteen-month-old infants track the language comprehension of communicative partners
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Fourteen‐month‐old infants track the language comprehension of communicative partners
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Infants learn enduring functions of novel tools from action demonstrations
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Nonverbal communicative signals modulate attention to object properties
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Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants
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Electrophysiological Evidence for the Understanding of Maternal Speech by 9-Month-Old Infants
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Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants
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Communicative function demonstration induces kind-based artifact representation in preverbal infants
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One-year-old infants appreciate the referential nature of deictic gestures and words
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