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      Infants can learn decontextualized words before their first birthday.

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      Child development
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Can infants below age 1 year learn words in one context and understand them in another? To investigate this question, two groups of parents trained infants from age 9 months on 8 categories of common objects. A control group received no training. At 12 months, infants in the experimental groups, but not in the control group, showed comprehension of the words in a new context. It appears that infants under 1 year old can learn words in a decontextualized, as distinct from a context-bound, fashion. Perceptual variability within the to-be-learned categories, and the perceptual similarity between training sets and the novel test items, did not appear to affect this learning.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Child Dev
          Child development
          Wiley
          0009-3920
          0009-3920
          February 8 2005
          : 76
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Psychology, University of Reading, United Kingdom. g.w.schafer@reading.ac.uk
          Article
          CDEV831
          10.1111/j.1467-8624.2005.00831.x
          15693759
          ba4a1b8e-3134-43e4-9ad8-9f81ba0e6511
          History

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