Babies understand a diverse set of words from six months old, 'exciting' new research finds
Even in young infants, language is ‘developing furiously under the surface’
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Your support makes all the difference.Babies have a basic understanding of a words ranging from ‘car’ to ‘foot’, according to new research.
Scientists used to think babies only understood words from around one year onwards.
But increasingly, research suggests infants as young as six months old have some grasp of the words used around them.
“Language is definitely developing furiously under the surface,” said Professor Elika Bergelson of Duke University, the lead author of the new study published in PNAS.
To test babies’ word recognition skills, the scientists used eye-tracking devices to monitor them while they were presented with images on a screen, and while their caregiver spoke to them.
In previous work, Professor Bergelson used this setup to demonstrate that babies aged six to nine months could understand what was meant by words for food items and body parts. When the caregiver read out a word like “apple”, the babies tended to direct their gaze to the relevant image.
This new study suggests that the babies’ repertoire is even more diverse. The babies were presented with two images that were either related or unrelated. Related images included foot and hand, while unrelated images might be foot and milk carton.
When their caregivers read one of the words, the babies spent more time looking at the relevant image when it was clearly unrelated to the other image in the pair.
The babies were able to tell that “car and stroller”, for example, are more alike than “car and juice”.
While the study doesn’t suggest babies appreciate the “full-fledged adult meaning”, these findings suggest a basic understanding of a range of words, and that babies appreciate the relative similarity of certain words.
“This study is an exciting first step in identifying how early infants learn words,” said Professor Sandra Waxman, a child development researcher at Northwestern University who was not involved in the study.
“Even in the very early stages of comprehension, babies seem to know something about how words relate to each other,” said Professor Bergelson.
The second part of Professor Bergelson’s study used a recorder attached to a baby vest that monitored the infants’ interactions with their caregivers, to understand how home environment influenced uptake of words.
Analysis of the resulting recordings revealed that the amount of time caregivers spent talking about objects that the baby could actually see correlated with the babies’ overall word comprehension.
For Professor Bergelson, the message to parents is obvious. “The more you can talk to your kid, the better,” she said. “They are listening and learning from what you say – even if it doesn’t appear to be so.”
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