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Language Development01:22

Language Development

Children master language quickly and with relative ease, supported by both biological predisposition and reinforcement. B. F. Skinner (1957) proposed that language is learned through reinforcement, while Noam Chomsky (1965) argued that language acquisition mechanisms are biologically determined.
The critical period for language acquisition suggests that the ability to acquire language is at its peak early in life. As people age, this proficiency decreases. Language development begins very...
Piaget's Stage 1 of Cognitive Development01:14

Piaget's Stage 1 of Cognitive Development

The sensorimotor stage, the initial phase of Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development, spans the first two years of a child's life. During this period, infants actively engage with their surroundings, building cognitive awareness through direct interaction with the world. This interaction is primarily based on sensory perception and motor actions, allowing infants to gradually understand basic physical properties and predict how objects interact within their environment.
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The Nativist Approach01:21

The Nativist Approach

The nativist approach to infant cognitive development proposes that infants are born with inherent knowledge structures that allow them to interpret the world almost immediately. This perspective contrasts with earlier developmental theories, such as those proposed by Jean Piaget, which emphasized a more gradual acquisition of cognitive abilities through interaction with the environment. One key concept in this approach is object permanence — the understanding that objects continue to exist...
Development of Immunocompetence01:22

Development of Immunocompetence

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Relationship with Parents: Attachment01:28

Relationship with Parents: Attachment

Parent-child interactions lay the foundation for how we understand relationships throughout life. These interactions are not uniform across families; instead, they are shaped by a range of environmental, emotional, and behavioral factors unique to each caregiver-child dynamic. Social psychologists study these early relationships to understand how patterns formed in infancy influence social functioning and interpersonal behavior in adulthood.Attachment Theory and Early Relational ModelsJohn...
Self-Concept01:19

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Self-concept is the cognitive and emotional understanding individuals hold about their identity. It evolves through various developmental stages, beginning in infancy and maturing as children grow. This concept influences how individuals perceive their abilities, interact with others, and manage challenges throughout life.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 15, 2026

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization
05:35

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization

Published on: April 19, 2017

When do infants begin recognizing familiar words in sentences?

Rory A Depaolis1, Marilyn M Vihman2, Tamar Keren-Portnoy2

  • 1James Madison University.

Journal of Child Language
|December 21, 2012
PubMed
Summary

By 12 months, infants can recognize familiar words within sentences, a skill not present at 10 or 11 months. This developmental milestone in language comprehension emerges naturally from everyday exposure.

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Defining the Role Of Language in Infants' Object Categorization with Eye-tracking Paradigms
07:31

Defining the Role Of Language in Infants' Object Categorization with Eye-tracking Paradigms

Published on: February 8, 2019

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: May 15, 2026

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization
05:35

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization

Published on: April 19, 2017

Defining the Role Of Language in Infants' Object Categorization with Eye-tracking Paradigms
07:31

Defining the Role Of Language in Infants' Object Categorization with Eye-tracking Paradigms

Published on: February 8, 2019

Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Linguistics
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • Infants develop word recognition skills early in life.
  • Previous research indicates word recognition by 11 months in controlled settings.
  • The ability to recognize words in naturalistic sentence contexts remains less understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate infant word recognition in sentential context without prior experimental training.
  • To determine the age at which infants can identify familiar words embedded in sentences.
  • To compare word recognition abilities in naturalistic versus trained experimental settings.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized the headturn preference procedure.
  • Compared infant responses to sentences with familiar versus unfamiliar words.
  • Tested infants aged 10, 11, and 12 months.

Main Results:

  • Infants demonstrated the ability to recognize familiar words in sentence contexts exclusively at 12 months of age.
  • Ten- and 11-month-old infants did not show this ability.
  • This suggests a developmental emergence of auditory word segmentation within natural language.

Conclusions:

  • The capacity for recognizing familiar words within sentence structures develops by 12 months.
  • This ability appears to be acquired through natural language exposure rather than experimental training.
  • Memory-based mechanisms likely underpin the development of these language processing skills.