Article

Metacognitive developments in word learning: Mutual exclusivity and theory of mind

Details

Citation

Gollek C & Doherty M (2016) Metacognitive developments in word learning: Mutual exclusivity and theory of mind. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 148, pp. 51-69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2016.03.007

Abstract
This project examined the flexibility with which children can use pragmatic information to determine word reference. Extensive previous research shows that children choose an unfamiliar object as referent of a novel name—the disambiguation effect. We added a pragmatic cue indirectly indicating a familiar object as intended referent. In three experiments, preschool children’s ability to take this cue into account was specifically associated with false belief understanding and the ability to produce familiar alternative names (e.g., rabbit, animal) for a given referent. The association was predicted by the hypothesis that all three tasks require an understanding of perspective (linguistic or mental). The findings indicate that perspectival understanding is required to take into account indirect pragmatic information to suspend the disambiguation effect. Implications for lexical principles and sociopragmatic theories of word learning are discussed.

Keywords
Word learning; Mutual exclusivity bias; Disambiguation effect; Theory of mind; Alternative naming; Pragmatics

Journal
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology: Volume 148

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2016
Publication date online22/04/2016
Date accepted by journal22/03/2016
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/26130
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0022-0965