A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese

We present a developmental analysis of the structural organization of young children's and adults’ lexicons for European Portuguese. The production lexicons of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds, a receptive lexicon for 12- to 19-month-olds, and an adult lexicon were compared using the similarity neighbor...

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Main Authors: Selene Vicente, São Luís Castro, Amanda Walley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2003-06-01
Series:Journal of Portuguese Linguistics
Online Access:http://jpl.letras.ulisboa.pt/articles/38
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spelling doaj-5c6545a0eb2e4bda8a8964d5fbc355f82021-09-02T03:08:19ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesJournal of Portuguese Linguistics1645-45372397-55632003-06-012111513310.5334/jpl.3837A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European PortugueseSelene Vicente0São Luís Castro1Amanda Walley2Universidade do Porto, PortugalUniversidade do Porto, PortugalUniveristy of Alabama, at BirminghamWe present a developmental analysis of the structural organization of young children's and adults’ lexicons for European Portuguese. The production lexicons of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds, a receptive lexicon for 12- to 19-month-olds, and an adult lexicon were compared using the similarity neighborhood paradigm (e.g., Charles-Luce & Luce, 1990). For each lexicon, similarity neighborhoods were computed for words with 3 to 8 phonemes, and phonological neighborhood sizes were compared. A phonological neighbor was defined as any word in one of the lexicons that differed from a given target by one phoneme substitution, deletion, or addition. Results showed structural differences between shorter (3-, 4- and 5-phoneme) and longer (6- to 8-phoneme) words. There was no age effect for longer words, of which ca. 92% had no neighbors. Shorter words, in contrast, had more neighbors: in the children's lexicons, ca. 58% of shorter words had one to four neighbors, and 8% had five to seven neighbors; only ca. 36% had no neighbors. An age effect was found, whereby similarity neighborhoods become increasingly dense over the course of childhood. The results are discussed in light of previous findings for English-speaking children and adults, and their implications for the development of spoken word recognition by Portuguese listeners are considered.http://jpl.letras.ulisboa.pt/articles/38
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Selene Vicente
São Luís Castro
Amanda Walley
spellingShingle Selene Vicente
São Luís Castro
Amanda Walley
A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese
Journal of Portuguese Linguistics
author_facet Selene Vicente
São Luís Castro
Amanda Walley
author_sort Selene Vicente
title A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese
title_short A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese
title_full A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese
title_fullStr A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese
title_full_unstemmed A developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in European Portuguese
title_sort developmental analysis of similarity neighborhoods in european portuguese
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Journal of Portuguese Linguistics
issn 1645-4537
2397-5563
publishDate 2003-06-01
description We present a developmental analysis of the structural organization of young children's and adults’ lexicons for European Portuguese. The production lexicons of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds, a receptive lexicon for 12- to 19-month-olds, and an adult lexicon were compared using the similarity neighborhood paradigm (e.g., Charles-Luce & Luce, 1990). For each lexicon, similarity neighborhoods were computed for words with 3 to 8 phonemes, and phonological neighborhood sizes were compared. A phonological neighbor was defined as any word in one of the lexicons that differed from a given target by one phoneme substitution, deletion, or addition. Results showed structural differences between shorter (3-, 4- and 5-phoneme) and longer (6- to 8-phoneme) words. There was no age effect for longer words, of which ca. 92% had no neighbors. Shorter words, in contrast, had more neighbors: in the children's lexicons, ca. 58% of shorter words had one to four neighbors, and 8% had five to seven neighbors; only ca. 36% had no neighbors. An age effect was found, whereby similarity neighborhoods become increasingly dense over the course of childhood. The results are discussed in light of previous findings for English-speaking children and adults, and their implications for the development of spoken word recognition by Portuguese listeners are considered.
url http://jpl.letras.ulisboa.pt/articles/38
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