TY - JOUR
T1 - Young children's imitation of sentence subjects
T2 - Evidence of processing limitations
AU - Valian, Virginia
AU - Hoeffner, James
AU - Aubry, Stephanie
PY - 1996/1
Y1 - 1996/1
N2 - Elicited imitation was used to determine whether young children's inconsistent production of sentence subjects was due to limitations in their knowledge of English or in their ability to access and use that knowledge. Nineteen young children (age range = 1 year 10 months to 2 years 8 months; Mean Length of Utterance [MLU] range = 1.28 to 4.93) repeated sentences that varied in length, structure, and type of subject. A competence-deficit hypothesis would predict that children below MLU 3 would differentially omit expletive subjects and subjects preceded by a discourse topic more often than children above MLU 3. That hypothesis was discontinued. A performance-deficit hypothesis would predict that children below MLU 3 would omit more subjects from long sentences than short ones, and that the high-MLU children would not show a length effect. That hypothesis was confirmed. Processing limitations, rather than a defective grammar, explain very young children's absent subjects.
AB - Elicited imitation was used to determine whether young children's inconsistent production of sentence subjects was due to limitations in their knowledge of English or in their ability to access and use that knowledge. Nineteen young children (age range = 1 year 10 months to 2 years 8 months; Mean Length of Utterance [MLU] range = 1.28 to 4.93) repeated sentences that varied in length, structure, and type of subject. A competence-deficit hypothesis would predict that children below MLU 3 would differentially omit expletive subjects and subjects preceded by a discourse topic more often than children above MLU 3. That hypothesis was discontinued. A performance-deficit hypothesis would predict that children below MLU 3 would omit more subjects from long sentences than short ones, and that the high-MLU children would not show a length effect. That hypothesis was confirmed. Processing limitations, rather than a defective grammar, explain very young children's absent subjects.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33846628550
U2 - 10.1037/0012-1649.32.1.153
DO - 10.1037/0012-1649.32.1.153
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33846628550
SN - 0012-1649
VL - 32
SP - 153
EP - 164
JO - Developmental Psychology
JF - Developmental Psychology
IS - 1
ER -