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At 6–9 months, human infants know the meanings of many common nouns
Edited by Willem J. M. Levelt, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands, and approved December 8, 2011 (received for review August 17, 2011)

Abstract
It is widely accepted that infants begin learning their native language not by learning words, but by discovering features of the speech signal: consonants, vowels, and combinations of these sounds. Learning to understand words, as opposed to just perceiving their sounds, is said to come later, between 9 and 15 mo of age, when infants develop a capacity for interpreting others’ goals and intentions. Here, we demonstrate that this consensus about the developmental sequence of human language learning is flawed: in fact, infants already know the meanings of several common words from the age of 6 mo onward. We presented 6- to 9-mo-old infants with sets of pictures to view while their parent named a picture in each set. Over this entire age range, infants directed their gaze to the named pictures, indicating their understanding of spoken words. Because the words were not trained in the laboratory, the results show that even young infants learn ordinary words through daily experience with language. This surprising accomplishment indicates that, contrary to prevailing beliefs, either infants can already grasp the referential intentions of adults at 6 mo or infants can learn words before this ability emerges. The precocious discovery of word meanings suggests a perspective in which learning vocabulary and learning the sound structure of spoken language go hand in hand as language acquisition begins.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: elikab{at}psych.upenn.edu.
Author contributions: E.B. and D.S. designed research; E.B. performed research; E.B. analyzed data; and E.B. and D.S. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
*Because the pairs are yoked, for each pair A–B, the values of this measure for A and for B are arithmetically redundant (the value for A is necessarily the complement of the value for B). Thus, the item results are presented item pair by item pair (Fig. 2).
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1113380109/-/DCSupplemental.