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Dive into the research topics where Anna Gavarró is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Gavarró.


Language Acquisition | 2008

Article Omission Across Child Languages

Maria Teresa Guasti; Anna Gavarró; Joke de Lange; Claudia Caprin

Article omission is known to be a feature of early grammar, although it does not affect all child languages to the same extent. In this article we analyze the production of articles by 12 children, 4 speakers of Catalan, 4 speakers of Italian, and 4 speakers of Dutch. We consider the results in the light of (i) the adult input the children are exposed to, (ii) the prosodic properties of articles in the three languages, and (iii) the properties of the syntax-semantics mapping of nouns in the languages under consideration. We show that the proportion of bare nouns (grammatical or ungrammatical) in the adult input does not bear any systematic relation to child production/omission of articles and that the full developmental pattern observed can be explained by appealing to the role of the nominal mapping parameter (NMP) in guiding acquisition, in conjunction with prosodic properties of articles and with discourse conditions.


Language Acquisition | 2010

Object Clitic Omission: Two Language Types

Anna Gavarró; Vicenç Torrens; Kenneth Wexler

The literature generally assumes that object clitic omission is equally allowed in all child languages. In this paper we challenge this claim by means of an elicitation experiment carried out with children acquiring two closely related languages, Catalan and Spanish. Our results show that while omission is high in young Catalan-speaking children, it is very low in Spanish-speaking children. We argue that this difference can be attributed to a property of their respective grammars (the presence or otherwise of past participle agreement when objects cliticize) under the Unique Checking Constraint of Wexler (1998). In a second experiment, we confirm the robustness of early sensitivity to past participle agreement; through a grammaticality judgment task we find a statistically significant difference between the two languages. We show that the parametric approach postulated can be extended, for mandatory, overt objects, beyond Catalan and Spanish, broadening the empirical scope of the Unique Checking Constraint.


Journal of Child Language | 2016

The acquisition of Chinese relative clauses: contrasting two theoretical approaches

Shenai Hu; Anna Gavarró; Mirta Vernice; Maria Teresa Guasti

This study examines the comprehension of relative clauses by Chinese-speaking children, and evaluates the validity of the predictions of the Dependency Locality Theory (Gibson, 1998, 2000) and the Relativized Minimality approach (Friedmann, Belletti & Rizzi, 2009). One hundred and twenty children from three to eight years of age were tested by using a character-sentence matching task. We found a preference for subject relative clauses that persists as children grow older. This preference is predicted by the Relativized Minimality approach, but not by the Dependency Locality Theory. In addition, we observed a fine-grained class of errors in comprehension. We discuss it in the light of the head-final status of Chinese relative clauses.


Language Acquisition | 2016

A cross-linguistic study of the acquisition of clitic and pronoun production

Spyridoula Varlokosta; Adriana Belletti; João Costa; Naama Friedmann; Anna Gavarró; Kleanthes K. Grohmann; Maria Teresa Guasti; Laurice Tuller; Maria Lobo; Darinka Anđelković; Núria Argemí; Larisa Avram; Sanne Berends; Valentina Brunetto; Hélène Delage; Maria-José Ezeizabarrena; Iris Fattal; Ewa Haman; Angeliek van Hout; Kristine M. Jensen de López; Napoleon Katsos; Lana Kologranic; Nadezda Krstić; Jelena Kuvač Kraljević; Aneta Miękisz; Michaela Nerantzini; Clara Queraltó; Zeljana Radic; Sílvia Ruiz; Uli Sauerland

ABSTRACT This study develops a single elicitation method to test the acquisition of third-person pronominal objects in 5-year-olds for 16 languages. This methodology allows us to compare the acquisition of pronominals in languages that lack object clitics (“pronoun languages”) with languages that employ clitics in the relevant context (“clitic languages”), thus establishing a robust cross-linguistic baseline in the domain of clitic and pronoun production for 5-year-olds. High rates of pronominal production are found in our results, indicating that children have the relevant pragmatic knowledge required to select a pronominal in the discourse setting involved in the experiment as well as the relevant morphosyntactic knowledge involved in the production of pronominals. It is legitimate to conclude from our data that a child who at age 5 is not able to produce any or few pronominals is a child at risk for language impairment. In this way, pronominal production can be taken as a developmental marker, provided that one takes into account certain cross-linguistic differences discussed in the article.


Behavior Research Methods | 2016

Ratings of age of acquisition of 299 words across 25 languages: Is there a cross-linguistic order of words?

Magdalena Łuniewska; Ewa Haman; Sharon Armon-Lotem; Bartłomiej Etenkowski; Frenette Southwood; Darinka Anđelković; Elma Blom; Tessel Boerma; Shula Chiat; Pascale Engel de Abreu; Natalia Gagarina; Anna Gavarró; Gisela Håkansson; Tina Hickey; Kristine M. Jensen de López; Theodoros Marinis; Maša Popović; Elin Thordardottir; Agnė Blažienė; Myriam Cantú Sánchez; Ineta Dabašinskienė; Pınar Ege; Inger Anne Ehret; Nelly Ann Fritsche; Daniela Gatt; Bibi Janssen; Maria Kambanaros; Svetlana Kapalková; Bjarke Sund Kronqvist; Sari Kunnari

We present a new set of subjective age-of-acquisition (AoA) ratings for 299 words (158 nouns, 141 verbs) in 25 languages from five language families (Afro-Asiatic: Semitic languages; Altaic: one Turkic language: Indo-European: Baltic, Celtic, Germanic, Hellenic, Slavic, and Romance languages; Niger-Congo: one Bantu language; Uralic: Finnic and Ugric languages). Adult native speakers reported the age at which they had learned each word. We present a comparison of the AoA ratings across all languages by contrasting them in pairs. This comparison shows a consistency in the orders of ratings across the 25 languages. The data were then analyzed (1) to ascertain how the demographic characteristics of the participants influenced AoA estimations and (2) to assess differences caused by the exact form of the target question (when did you learn vs. when do children learn this word); (3) to compare the ratings obtained in our study to those of previous studies; and (4) to assess the validity of our study by comparison with quasi-objective AoA norms derived from the MacArthur–Bates Communicative Development Inventories (MB-CDI). All 299 words were judged as being acquired early (mostly before the age of 6 years). AoA ratings were associated with the raters’ social or language status, but not with the raters’ age or education. Parents reported words as being learned earlier, and bilinguals reported learning them later. Estimations of the age at which children learn the words revealed significantly lower ratings of AoA. Finally, comparisons with previous AoA and MB-CDI norms support the validity of the present estimations. Our AoA ratings are available for research or other purposes.


Language Acquisition | 2016

A large-scale cross-linguistic investigation of the acquisition of passive

Sharon Armon-Lotem; Ewa Hamann; Kristine M. Jensen de López; Magdalena Smoczyńska; Kazuko Yatsushiro; Marcin Szczerbinski; Anna Maria Henrica (Angeliek) van Hout; Ineta Dabasinskiene; Anna Gavarró; Erin Hobbs; Laura Kamandulytė-Merfeldienė; Napoleon Katsos; Sari Kunnari; Chrisa Nitsiou-Michaelidou; Lone Sundahl Olsen; Xavier Parramon; Uli Sauerland; Reeli Torn Leesik; Heather K. J. van der Lely

ABSTRACT This cross-linguistic study evaluates children’s understanding of passives in 11 typologically different languages: Catalan, Cypriot Greek, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, German, Hebrew, Lithuanian, and Polish. The study intends to determine whether the reported gaps between the comprehension of active and passive and between short and full passive hold cross-linguistically. The present study offers two major findings. The first is the relative ease in which 5-year-old children across 11 different languages are able to comprehend short passive constructions (compared to the full passive). The second and perhaps the more intriguing finding is the variation seen across the different languages in children’s comprehension of full passive constructions. We argued, based on the present findings, that given the relevant linguistic input (e.g., flexibility in word order and experience with argument reduction), children at the age of 5 are capable of acquiring both the short passive and the full passive. Variation, however, stems from the specific characteristics of each language, and good mastery of passives by the age of 5 is not a universal, cross-linguistically valid milestone in typical language acquisition. Therefore, difficulties with passives (short or full) can be used for identifying SLI at the age of 5 only in those languages in which it has already been mastered by typically developing children.


Bilingualism: Language and Cognition | 2003

Economy and word order patterns in bilingual English-Dutch acquisition

Anna Gavarró

The proposal has been made (Zuckerman, 1999, 2001, with various antecedents) that economy of derivation is operative in language acquisition in such a way that whenever movement appears to be optional to the child, s/he chooses the derivation without movement. In this paper we undertake the task of finding evidence for this claim in monolingual and bilingual acquisition. We draw on data available in the literature and on original data from a bilingual English-Dutch child. This childs word order patterns testify to the fact that movement never occurs beyond the target (e.g. there are no V2 embedded clauses in his Dutch productions), and when deviant word orders are attested they result from lack of raising (in particular, lack of verb raising in embedded sentences in English). These patterns are predicted if economy of derivation holds; further, bilingual children, having as input languages with possibly diverging parameter settings, are especially prone to an extended parameter setting period, giving rise to deviant word order patterns, and thus offering insight into the mechanisms of language acquisition.


Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics | 2017

Noun and verb knowledge in monolingual preschool children across 17 languages: Data from cross-linguistic lexical tasks (LITMUS-CLT)

Ewa Haman; Magdalena Łuniewska; Pernille Hansen; Hanne Gram Simonsen; Shula Chiat; Jovana Bjekić; Agnė Blažienė; Katarzyna Chyl; Ineta Dabašinskienė; Pascale Engel de Abreu; Natalia Gagarina; Anna Gavarró; Gisela Håkansson; Efrat Harel; Elisabeth Holm; Svetlana Kapalková; Sari Kunnari; Chiara Levorato; Josefin Lindgren; Karolina Mieszkowska; Laia Montes Salarich; Anneke Perold Potgieter; Ingeborg Sophie Bjønness Ribu; Natalia Ringblom; Tanja Rinker; Maja Roch; Daniela Slančová; Frenette Southwood; Roberta Tedeschi; Aylin Müge Tuncer

ABSTRACT This article investigates the cross-linguistic comparability of the newly developed lexical assessment tool Cross-linguistic Lexical Tasks (LITMUS-CLT). LITMUS-CLT is a part the Language Impairment Testing in Multilingual Settings (LITMUS) battery (Armon-Lotem, de Jong & Meir, 2015). Here we analyse results on receptive and expressive word knowledge tasks for nouns and verbs across 17 languages from eight different language families: Baltic (Lithuanian), Bantu (isiXhosa), Finnic (Finnish), Germanic (Afrikaans, British English, South African English, German, Luxembourgish, Norwegian, Swedish), Romance (Catalan, Italian), Semitic (Hebrew), Slavic (Polish, Serbian, Slovak) and Turkic (Turkish). The participants were 639 monolingual children aged 3;0–6;11 living in 15 different countries. Differences in vocabulary size were small between 16 of the languages; but isiXhosa-speaking children knew significantly fewer words than speakers of the other languages. There was a robust effect of word class: accuracy was higher for nouns than verbs. Furthermore, comprehension was more advanced than production. Results are discussed in the context of cross-linguistic comparisons of lexical development in monolingual and bilingual populations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Cross-linguistic patterns in the acquisition of quantifiers.

Napoleon Katsos; Chris Cummins; Maria-José Ezeizabarrena; Anna Gavarró; Jelena Kuvač Kraljević; Gordana Hrzica; Kleanthes K. Grohmann; Athina Skordi; Kristine M. Jensen de López; Lone Sundahl; Angeliek van Hout; Bart Hollebrandse; Jessica Overweg; Myrthe Faber; Margreet van Koert; Nafsika Smith; Maigi Vija; Sirli Zupping; Sari Kunnari; Tiffany Morisseau; Manana Rusieshvili; Kazuko Yatsushiro; Anja Fengler; Spyridoula Varlokosta; Katerina Konstantzou; Shira Farby; Maria Teresa Guasti; Mirta Vernice; Reiko Okabe; Miwa Isobe

Significance Although much research has been devoted to the acquisition of number words, relatively little is known about the acquisition of other expressions of quantity. We propose that the order of acquisition of quantifiers is related to features inherent to the meaning of each term. Four specific dimensions of the meaning and use of quantifiers are found to capture robust similarities in the order of acquisition of quantifiers in similar ways across 31 languages, representing 11 language types. Learners of most languages are faced with the task of acquiring words to talk about number and quantity. Much is known about the order of acquisition of number words as well as the cognitive and perceptual systems and cultural practices that shape it. Substantially less is known about the acquisition of quantifiers. Here, we consider the extent to which systems and practices that support number word acquisition can be applied to quantifier acquisition and conclude that the two domains are largely distinct in this respect. Consequently, we hypothesize that the acquisition of quantifiers is constrained by a set of factors related to each quantifier’s specific meaning. We investigate competence with the expressions for “all,” “none,” “some,” “some…not,” and “most” in 31 languages, representing 11 language types, by testing 768 5-y-old children and 536 adults. We found a cross-linguistically similar order of acquisition of quantifiers, explicable in terms of four factors relating to their meaning and use. In addition, exploratory analyses reveal that language- and learner-specific factors, such as negative concord and gender, are significant predictors of variation.


Applied Psycholinguistics | 2016

Children's production of head-final relative clauses: The case of Mandarin

Shenai Hu; Anna Gavarró; Maria Teresa Guasti

We explored the acquisition of relative clauses in Mandarin Chinese, a subject–verb–object language with head-final relatives. One hundred and twenty-five children (aged 3 years to 8 years, 11 months) and 20 adults participated in an elicitation task. The results revealed a subject advantage at all ages and a large production of relative clauses with resumptive noun phrases (NPs) across age groups. To further explore the latter finding, we carried out a grammaticality judgment study with 80 adults. We found that relative clauses with resumptive NPs are acceptable in the spoken language for many adult native speakers of Mandarin. This result is at odds with Chinese prescriptive grammar. We propose an analysis of the subject advantage based on the structure intervention expressed as relativized minimality and argue that resumptive NPs are an option in Mandarin relative clauses.

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Maria Teresa Guasti

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Io Salmons

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Spyridoula Varlokosta

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Maria-José Ezeizabarrena

University of the Basque Country

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