Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language

By investigating Dutch children’s interpretation habitual and deontic conditionals, this paper explores their mapping of the concepts of hypotheticality and conditionality into a corresponding linguistic form of IF-conditionals. Results of 46 children (20 girls; age range = 3;11-6;00; mean = 4;11)...

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Main Author: Jing Lin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Science-res Publishing 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Child Language Acquisition and Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://science-res.com/index.php/jclad/article/view/10
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spelling doaj-da2dd1695d9a425794ebc7f4fed582cd2021-02-22T07:58:36ZengScience-res PublishingJournal of Child Language Acquisition and Development2148-19972020-12-01Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and languageJing Lin0Leiden University By investigating Dutch children’s interpretation habitual and deontic conditionals, this paper explores their mapping of the concepts of hypotheticality and conditionality into a corresponding linguistic form of IF-conditionals. Results of 46 children (20 girls; age range = 3;11-6;00; mean = 4;11) in a truth value judgment task with three types of stimuli, i.e. habitual conditionals, deontic conditionals, and conjunctive/additive constructions, show the following. First, the preschoolers do not exhibit different interpretation performances with the two types of conditional stimuli and the conjunctive/additive type. Second, the preschoolers show more target-like interpretation performances with deontic conditionals than habitual conditionals when it comes to the concept of conditionality. These results suggest a delayed mapping of the two concepts investigated into the corresponding linguistic construction. In other words, the syntactic construction of IF-conditional in Dutch is first acquired before the two concepts are assigned to it. Taking into consideration different factors, this paper discusses possible explanations for the delay. https://science-res.com/index.php/jclad/article/view/10Conditional constructions, conditionality, Dutch, hypotheticality, truth value judgment task
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jing Lin
spellingShingle Jing Lin
Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
Journal of Child Language Acquisition and Development
Conditional constructions, conditionality, Dutch, hypotheticality, truth value judgment task
author_facet Jing Lin
author_sort Jing Lin
title Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
title_short Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
title_full Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
title_fullStr Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
title_full_unstemmed Preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
title_sort preschoolers’ interpretation of habitual and deontic conditionals: a delayed mapping between concept and language
publisher Science-res Publishing
series Journal of Child Language Acquisition and Development
issn 2148-1997
publishDate 2020-12-01
description By investigating Dutch children’s interpretation habitual and deontic conditionals, this paper explores their mapping of the concepts of hypotheticality and conditionality into a corresponding linguistic form of IF-conditionals. Results of 46 children (20 girls; age range = 3;11-6;00; mean = 4;11) in a truth value judgment task with three types of stimuli, i.e. habitual conditionals, deontic conditionals, and conjunctive/additive constructions, show the following. First, the preschoolers do not exhibit different interpretation performances with the two types of conditional stimuli and the conjunctive/additive type. Second, the preschoolers show more target-like interpretation performances with deontic conditionals than habitual conditionals when it comes to the concept of conditionality. These results suggest a delayed mapping of the two concepts investigated into the corresponding linguistic construction. In other words, the syntactic construction of IF-conditional in Dutch is first acquired before the two concepts are assigned to it. Taking into consideration different factors, this paper discusses possible explanations for the delay.
topic Conditional constructions, conditionality, Dutch, hypotheticality, truth value judgment task
url https://science-res.com/index.php/jclad/article/view/10
work_keys_str_mv AT jinglin preschoolersinterpretationofhabitualanddeonticconditionalsadelayedmappingbetweenconceptandlanguage
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