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Fourteen-month-old infants track the language comprehension of communicative partners
Title / Series / Name
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Pages
Editors
Keywords
N400
Theory-of-Mind
experimental pragmatics
false belief
language acquisition
social cognition
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cognitive Neuroscience
Theory-of-Mind
experimental pragmatics
false belief
language acquisition
social cognition
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cognitive Neuroscience
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/26914
Abstract
Infants employ sophisticated mechanisms to acquire their first language, including some that rely on taking the perspective of adults as speakers or listeners. When do infants first show awareness of what other people understand? We tested 14-month-old infants in two experiments measuring event-related potentials. In Experiment 1, we established that infants produce the N400 effect, a brain signature of semantic violations, in a live object naming paradigm in the presence of an adult observer. In Experiment 2, we induced false beliefs about the labeled objects in the adult observer to test whether infants keep track of the other person's comprehension. The results revealed that infants reacted to the semantic incongruity heard by the other as if they encountered it themselves: they exhibited an N400-like response, even though labels were congruous from their perspective. This finding demonstrates that infants track the linguistic understanding of social partners.
Topic
Publisher
Place of Publication
Type
Journal article
Date
2019-03
Language
ISBN
Identifiers
10.1111/desc.12751