Publications

Publication details [#54716]

Aslin, Richard N., Katherine S. White and Celeste Kidd. 2011. Learning the meaning of “um”. Toddlers' developing use of speech disfluencies as cues to speakers' referential intentions. In Robinson, Peter, ed. Second Language Task Complexity. Researching the Cognition Hypothesis of language learning and performance. (Task-Based Language Teaching 2). John Benjamins. pp. 91–106.
Publication type
Article in book
Publication language
English
Place, Publisher
John Benjamins

Annotation

Previous research has uncovered various contextual and social cues that children may use to infer speakers' communicative intentions (e.g. joint visual attention, pointing). This paper reviews evidence from eye-tracking studies that suggests that by 2;6 years of age, children use another previously unexplored cue to infer speakers' communicative intentions: speech disfluencies. Disfluencies (e.g. “uh” and “um”) often occur before unfamiliar, infrequent, and discourse-new words. Thus, disfluencies provide information about a speaker's intended referent. Further children use the presence of a disfluency before an object label to anticipate a novel, discourse-new referent. These results demonstrate that children go beyond their input, acquiring the generalization that disfluencies precede not just specific words, but rather categories of words that are difficult to produce.