JOURNAL ARTICLE

Syntactic Creativity Errors in Children's Wh‐Questions

C. Jane LutkenGéraldine LégendreAkira Omaki

Year: 2020 Journal:   Cognitive Science Vol: 44 (7)Pages: e12849-e12849   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract Previous work has reported that children creatively make syntactic errors that are ungrammatical in their target language, but are grammatical in another language. One of the most well‐known examples is medial wh‐question errors in English‐speaking children's wh‐questions (e.g., What do you think who the cat chased? from Thornton, 1990). The evidence for this non‐target‐like structure in both production and comprehension has been taken to support the existence of innate, syntactic parameters that define all possible grammatical variation, which serve as a top‐down constraint guiding children's language acquisition process. The present study reports new story‐based production and comprehension experiments that challenge this interpretation. While we replicated previous observations of medial wh‐question errors in children's sentence production (Experiment 1), we saw a reduction in evidence indicating that English‐speaking children assign interpretations that conform to the medial wh‐question pattern (Experiment 2). Crucially, we found no correlation between production and comprehension errors (Experiment 3). We suggest that these errors are the result of children's immature sentence production mechanisms rather than immature grammatical knowledge.

Keywords:
Comprehension Sentence Linguistics Production (economics) Syntax Computer science Sentence processing Language production Psychology Variation (astronomy) Cognitive psychology Natural language processing Cognition Philosophy

Metrics

7
Cited By
0.86
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
137
Refs
0.74
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Language Development and Disorders
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Developmental and Educational Psychology
Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience
Reading and Literacy Development
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Developmental and Educational Psychology

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