Infants aged 12 months use the gender feature in determiners to anticipate upcoming words: an eye-tracking study

J Child Lang. 2023 Jul;50(4):841-859. doi: 10.1017/S030500092200006X. Epub 2022 Mar 28.

Abstract

We investigated online early comprehension in Italian children aged 12 and 20 months, focusing on the role of morphosyntactic features (i.e., gender) carried by determiners in facilitating comprehension and anticipating upcoming words. A naturalistic eye-tracking procedure was employed, recording looking behaviours during a classical Looking-While-Listening task. Children were presented with sentences and pictures of two objects representing nouns characterised by either the same gender (determiner was uninformative) or a different gender (determiner was informative). As expected, 20-month-old children recognised the target picture when this was named, and they were faster in the different-gender condition. Interestingly, 12-month-old infants identified the target picture only when presented with an informative determiner (different-gender condition). These results suggest that, as early as 12 months of age and with an improvement seen at 20 months of age, toddlers can extract and use determiner gender features to enhance comprehension and make predictions about upcoming words.

Keywords: early lexical comprehension; grammatical gender; language acquisition; looking while listening; online language processing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Auditory Perception
  • Comprehension
  • Eye-Tracking Technology*
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Language
  • Language Development*