How to measure the development of syntactic complexity in child language Cover Image

Kuidas mõõta süntaktilise komplekssuse arengut lastekeeles
How to measure the development of syntactic complexity in child language

Author(s): Airi Kapanen
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Psychology, Theoretical Linguistics, Syntax
Published by: Tallinna Ülikooli Kirjastus
Keywords: L1 acquisition; structural complexity; absolute complexity

Summary/Abstract: As language consists of layers with different degrees of complexity, there is a need to take complexity into consideration in child language research. Here, the central aim is to give a critical overview of syntactic complexity theory and the methods that are used to measure this phenomenon in the spontaneous speech of a child acquiring his/her first language. Based on multiple viewpoints, the two main methods and tools are discussed: measuring syntactic complexity in children’s spontaneous speech by MLU (mean length of utterance) and IPSyn (Index of Productive Syntax). Besides critical comparison of the two, the usefulness of these tools―created for a flective language, such as English―in studying other types of languages is examined; e.g. can they also be used with Estonian, an agglutinative type of language. Whatever measuring tools one is planning to use, it is the researcher’s own conscious knowledge of syntactic complexity and the possibilities of measuring it with certain tools that come first. In addition, the role of motherese, i.e. mother’s, father’s or any other caretaker’s child-directed speech has to be taken into account: at the very beginning, the child does not acquire the potential complexity of the whole language, but only of a register similar to his/her caretaker’s speech.

  • Issue Year: 2014
  • Issue No: 16
  • Page Range: 23-58
  • Page Count: 36
  • Language: Estonian
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