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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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.
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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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