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Cognitive and Language Development Lab at Montclair State University Summer 2016-Spring 2017 News Within the last year, your child participated in one of our research studies. We are writing, first of all, to THANK YOU for your participation. We couldn t do our research without your help and we really appreciate your interest! We also wanted to let you know what we, as researchers, learned from the studies we conducted. In this newsletter, you will read about the results of different studies that we have completed in our lab over the past year. If you have any questions about these studies or the lab in general, please feel free to call us at (973)-655-4045 or email us at Lakustalab@gmail.com. We also have a webpage for the lab where you can find out more about our studies: msudevlab.com Like us on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/msudevlab/ Also, if you found this experience to be positive and would like to recommend our studies to other parents with young children, we would be grateful! We are always looking for new participants! We hope to have you come visit for more studies soon! Thank You! COMPREHENSION OF SPATIAL PREPOSITIONS Inspired by the results of past research, including some of our own, we began to explore language acquisition of infants. More specifically, we are testing whether infants comprehend prepositions marking endpoints ( to, into, on, and next to ). Recently, we tested 18-month olds comprehension of spatial prepositions and are now recording responses in 21.5 through 24.5 month olds. At the start of the study, to further explore early language acquisition, we asked the guardians of each infant participant to complete a checklist called the MacArthur Bates Communicative Development Inventory. This checklist allows the guardian to report the infant s comprehension and production of various English terms such as, into, on, and to. We have found that 18-month old infants have higher comprehesion of the preposition on. This research expands our knowledge of what children understand before they speak fluently.

In order to directly measure infants' language comprehension of spatial prepositions, we developed a study that uses a method called the 'intermodal preferential looking paradigm' (IPLP). In this method, infants are shown two movies that play simultaneously with audio that describes one of the movies. For example, infants hear find the duck walking on the box, while viewing two movies: a duck walking on the box and a duck walking off of the box. If infants understand the spatial term that was said, we expect infants to look longer at the screen matching the audio (the duck walking on the box). As a result, we found that 18-month olds look longer at the video playing the duck moving onto the box, suggesting that they are understanding 'on'. CATEGORIZATION OF GOAL MOTION EVENTS Based on past findings, infants can distinguish the difference between goal (endpoint; e.g., duck walking to tree) and source events (starting point e.g., duck walking away from tree), preferring to look at goal over source events. However, the question of how infants conceptualize these goal and source events is yet to be explored. We wanted to know if infants represent endpoints in varying events as belonging to one unitary concept of 'goal'. Meaning, do infants think of two different events of a duck walking to a tree and a duck going onto a block as related because they contain an endpoint? This is similar to how a Dalmatian and Golden Retriever are represented under the category of 'dog', although they are different breeds. Using a modified version of the preferential looking paradigm (described above) in one study, 10, 14 and 18-month old infants were presented with two different simultaneous side-by-side displays, one showing a goal path (e.g., a duck going into a box) and one a source path (e.g., a duck going out of a box). We recorded how long infants looked at these displays. Infants were then shown videos that included the goal paths onto and next to (see familiarization trials depicted below). Then the infants were presented with the same two simultaneous videos that they were shown before the familiarization events (one goal path event paired with one source path event). If infants categorize goal path events during familiarization, they may attend more (and thus look longer) at the source path events after familiarization. This is exactly what we found! Ten, 14, and 18 month old infants categorize goal paths across motion events. Some of these findings were recently published in the journal, Cognition, which can be found at the following link: https://msudevlab.com/dr-lakusta/

Familiarization Trials 'Next to' 'On to' Test Trials Goal Events Source Events FOLLOW-UP! GOAL CATEGORIZATION IN INANIMATE MOTION EVENTS Past research has shown that at as early as 10 months, infants can tell the difference between an inanimate object such as a car and animate object such as a duck. Given this we asked if infants represent endpoints in varying events as belonging to one unitary concept of 'goal', with inanimate objects, such as a leaf going to a box or a leaf going onto a block. Using a modified version of the preferential looking paradigm (described above), 18-month old infants are presented with inanimate stimuli. These visuals contain two different simultaneous side-by-side displays, one showing a goal path (in-category event, e.g., a leaf going into a box) and one a source path (out of category event, e.g., a leaf going out of a box).

We are recording the length of time that infants look at each of these two displays. Infants are then shown a series of videos of goal paths such as onto and next to", (similar to familiarization trials depicted above). This is followed by the same two simultaneous videos that they were shown before the familiarization events (see below: one goal path event paired with one source path event). We will compare how long infants chose to look at the source versus the goal event prior to familiarization to looking time to source and goal events after familiarization. This will enable us to discover if 18 month olds categorize goal paths for events with inaniate objects moving to various end points (i.e. box, mailbox, etc). INFANTS CATEGORIZATION OF SUPPORT CONFIGURATIONS Support is one of the earliest spatial relations that infants understand. Support is typically thought of as a figure object being supported from below by a solid ground object like a rubber duck on top of a box. However, this definition of support is narrow and does not include other kinds of support configurations that exist in the world, such as adhesive support (a sticker on a car), suspension/ hanging (picture on a wall), and embedding (polka dots on boots). In this study, we ask how infants categorize support. One possibility is that early in development, infants core representation of support is support from below. This means that the earliest understanding of support is support from below and only later in life do children gradually add other types of support relationship to their category of support. Alternatively, infants might immediately form a broader category of support at a very young age that is inclusive of support from below and other support configurations like support via adhesion.

We use a method called the Intermodal Preferential Looking Paradigm (IPLP) to measure infants categorization of support events. Infants are first shown several instances of either a support via side event (left image) or a support from below event (right image) which prepares them to think about their category of support. Next, they are shown a split screen where two new events of each support configuration are played simultaneously side-by-side. The amount of time they spend looking at each event is recorded. If infants do not have a broad category of support, we expect them to look longer at the support via side event. Longer looking indicates that an infant is surprised by the novel spatial configuration, meaning they do not consider the event to be part of their current category of support. Our results show that 6- and 12-month-old infants do look longer at the support via side event compared to chance. This finding suggests that infants category of support may be restricted to support from below in the earliest stages of development. We are currently in the process of refining our methodology for this study. For example, we are now using a brand new eye-tracking device that will record infants looking times even more precisely! We have also added a 20-month-old age group to explore how older infants represent support once they have acquired language. The results of this study were recently presented at the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) conference in Austin, TX.

FUNDING AND PUBLICATIONS Much of the research reported in this newsletter was funded by the National Science Foundation, grant #1650861. We have presented our research at several professional conferences and published our results in peer-reviewed journals. These presentations would not be possible without your participation! Thank you!!!! Brucato, M., Bindra, A., Polen, M., Lakusta, L., & Landau, B. (2016). The language of support in young children s spontaneous speech. Poster presented at the Eastern Psychological Association, March, New York. Brucato, M., Kobezak, H., Bindra, A., Polen, M., Lakusta, L., Landau, B. (2017). The language of support in children's spontaneous speech. Presented at the Montclair State University Student Research Symposium, April, Montclair, NJ. Farese, S., Howard, D., Lawrie, M., Spinelli, D., Lakusta, L. (2017). 18 month old categorization. Presented at the Montclair State University Student Research Symposium, April, Montclair, NJ. Indarjit, M., Rossel, J. & Lakusta, L. (2017). Comprehension of Spatial Prepositions in 18-Month- Olds. Presented at the Montclair State University Student Research Symposium, April, Montclair, NJ. Lakusta, L. (2016). Conceptual foundations of language: Goals and sources over development. Invited paper presented at CUNY Colloquium Series, March, New York. Lakusta, L., Brucato, M., Bindra, A., Polen, M., & Landau, B. (2016, May). The Language of Support in Young Children s Spontaneous Speech. Poster presented at the International Congress of Infant Studies, May, New Orleans, LA. Lakusta, L., Brucato, M., Iroldi, C., Bindra, A., & Landau, B. (2017). Infants' categorization of support configurations. Presented at the Montclair State University Student Research Symposium, April, Montclair, NJ. Lakusta, L. & DiFabrizio, S., (2016). And, the Winner Is A Visual Preference for End Points over Starting Points in Infants Motion Event Representations, Infancy, 1-21 Lakusta, L., Muentener, P., Petrillo, L., Mullanaphy, N., & Muniz, L., (2016). Does making something move matter? Representations of goals and sources in causal motion events. Cognitive Science.

Lakusta, L., Spinelli, D., & Farese, S. (2016). The mapping of preverbal thought to language: Infants categorization of goal paths in motion events. Presented at the 20th International Conference on Infant Studies, May, New Orleans, LA. Lakusta, L., Spinelli, D., & Garcia, K., (2017). The relationship between pre-verbal event representations and semantic structures: The case of goal and source paths, Cognition, 174-187. Lakusta, L., Thothathiri, M., Mendez, D., Marinkovic, M. (2016). Evidence for Broad Notion of Source in Child Language,Proceedings Boston University Conference on Language Development, November, Boston Lakusta, L., Thothathiri, M., Mendez, D., Marinkovic, M. (2016). Evidence for Broad Notion of Source in Child Language, Poster presented at the Boston University Conference on Language Development, November, Boston. Lakusta, L. & Wagner, L. (2016). Conceptualizing the event: The relationship between infants representations and linguistic organization, in D. Barner & A. Baron (Eds.), Conceptual change and core knowledge. Oxford University Press. To view these and other posters presented at various conferences, please refer to our webpage at: msudevlab.com Thanks again for your participation! We hope to see you and your little one again in the future!