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Feature distinctiveness in verbs: links between verb distinctiveness, child directedspeech and age of acquisition

Abstract

Feature distinctiveness is a measure representing the uniqueness of objects’ features. Previous research found linksbetween noun feature distinctiveness and age of acquisition (i.e. nouns referring to objects with relatively unique featuresare learned earlier). The present work investigates the links between feature distinctiveness and age of acquisition in verbs.Using high-dimensional vector space modelling, noun and verb feature distinctiveness was represented as Manhattan distancebetween word nodes. Both nouns and verbs showed negative correlations between feature distinctiveness and age of acquisition(words of more distinctive objects learned earlier), suggesting a general distinctiveness bias. This effect was stronger for nouns.An investigation of child directed speech (CDS) from the CHILDES corpus showed a correlation between child directed wordfrequency and feature distinctiveness for nouns (featurally distinctive nouns are more common in CDS), but not for verbs. Thepossible link between distinctiveness in CDS and age of acquisition effects is discussed.

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