15か月の乳児が新しい単語を学ぶ能力を示す研究(By 15 months, infants begin to learn new words for objects)

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2025-04-23 ノースウェスタン大学

ノースウェスタン大学とハーバード大学の研究チームは、生後15か月の乳児が、視覚的に見たことのない物体に対しても、言語だけから新しい単語の意味を推測し、学習できることを初めて実証しました。例えば、乳児が「りんご」や「バナナ」などの果物の話を聞いている際に、「キンカン」という未知の単語が登場すると、乳児はそれが食べ物であり果物であると推測し、後にその物体を正しく識別できることが確認されました。この能力は、言語の文脈から意味を推測する「ファストマッピング」と呼ばれる学習メカニズムに関連しており、乳児が視覚的な手がかりなしに言語から意味を学ぶ初期段階を示しています。この研究は、乳児の言語と認知の発達における言語経験の重要性を強調し、早期の言語教育や発達支援の基盤となる可能性があります。

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意味プライミングが幼児の未見物体の名前学習能力を支えている Semantic priming supports infants’ ability to learn names of unseen objects

Elena Luchkina ,Sandra Waxman
PLOS One  Published: April 23, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0321775

15か月の乳児が新しい単語を学ぶ能力を示す研究(By 15 months, infants begin to learn new words for objects)

Abstract

Human language permits us to call to mind representations of objects, events, and ideas that we cannot witness directly, enabling us to learn about the world far beyond our immediate surroundings. When and how does this capacity emerge? To address this question, we evaluated infants at 12 and 15 months, asking whether they establish a representation of a novel noun’s meaning in the absence of any visible referents, and use this representation to identify a candidate referent when it later becomes available. During training, infants (67 12-month-olds; 67 15-month-olds) were primed with words and images of objects from a particular semantic neighborhood (e.g., fruits) and were also introduced to a novel noun (e.g., “a modi”), used to name a hidden object. During test, infants heard that noun again, this time with two unfamiliar objects present—one from the primed neighborhood (e.g., a dragon fruit) and the other from an unrelated semantic neighborhood (e.g., an ottoman). If infants can represent something about the meaning of the novel noun in the absence of a visible referent and then use such a representation when a candidate referent appears, then at test, they should prefer the object from the primed semantic neighborhood. At 15 months, infants succeeded. In contrast, 12-month-olds did not succeed on this task even after a full week of vocabulary training designed to boost the effect of priming. It is possible then that 12-month-olds’ representations of novel nouns’ meaning are not yet sufficiently rich (if any at all) to guide their choice of referent when one does appear. Together, these findings suggest that the capacity to establish a representation of a novel noun’s meaning in the absence of any visible referent and use this representation later to identify a candidate referent object emerges between 12 and 15 months.

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