Iris Nomikou
Bielefeld University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Iris Nomikou.
IEEE Transactions on Autonomous Mental Development | 2013
Joanna Raczaszek-Leonardi; Iris Nomikou; Katharina J. Rohlfing
Are higher-level cognitive processes the only way that purposefulness can be introduced into the human interaction? In this paper, we provide a microanalysis of early mother-child interactions and argue that the beginnings of joint intentionality can be traced to the practice of embedding the childs actions into culturally shaped episodes. As action becomes coaction, an infants perception becomes tuned to interaction affordances.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi; Iris Nomikou
According to situated, embodied, and distributed approaches to cognition, language is a crucial means for structuring social interactions. Recent approaches that emphasize this coordinative function treat language as a system of replicable constraints on individual and interactive dynamics. In this paper, we argue that the integration of the replicable-constraints approach to language with the ecological view on values allows for a deeper insight into processes of meaning creation in interaction. Such a synthesis of these frameworks draws attention to important sources of structuring interactions beyond the sheer efficiency of a collective system in its current task situation. Most importantly, the workings of linguistic constraints will be shown as embedded in more general fields of values, which are realized on multiple timescales. Because the ontogenetic timescale offers a convenient window into the emergence of linguistic constraints, we present illustrations of concrete mechanisms through which values may become embodied in language use in development.
Language Learning and Development | 2018
Iris Nomikou; Katharina J. Rohlfing; Philipp Cimiano; Jean M. Mandler
ABSTRACT Applying an eye-tracking technique, we tested early verb understanding in 48 infants aged 9 and 10 months. Infants saw two objects presented side by side and heard a verb that referred to a common action with one of these objects (e.g., eating relating to a banana). The verbs were spoken by the parent in an interrogative manner in order to elicit a looking behavior in the infant. Results showed that 9-month-old infants did not show recognition of our test words. However, 10-month-old infants were able to understand a number of the tested verbs. In the discussion, we relate our findings to the nature of early verb representations.
Ecological Psychology | 2018
Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi; Iris Nomikou; Katharina J. Rohlfing; Terrence W. Deacon
ABSTRACT In the embodied, situated, enacted and distributed approaches to cognition, the coordinative role of language comes to the fore. Language, with its symbolic properties, arises from a multimodal stream of interactive events and gradually gains power to constrain them in a functional and adaptive way. In this article, we attempt to integrate three approaches to information in cognitive systems to provide a theoretical background to the process of development of language as such a coordinator. Ecological psychology provides an explanation for how any behaviors or events become informative through the process of “tuning” to affordances that control individual and collective behavior. The dynamical approach helps to operationalize this control as a functional reduction of degrees of freedom of individual and collective systems. Cognitive semiotics provides a typology of constraints showing their interrelations: it proposes conditions under which informational controls that function as indices and icons may become symbolic, providing a qualitatively different form of constraint, which can be partially ungrounded from the ongoing stream of multimodal events. The article illustrates the proposed processes with examples from actual parent-infant interaction and points to ways of verifying them in a more quantitative way.
Brain Sciences | 2017
Iris Nomikou; Monique Koke; Katharina J. Rohlfing
In embodied theories on language, it is widely accepted that experience in acting generates an expectation of this action when hearing the word for it. However, how this expectation emerges during language acquisition is still not well understood. Assuming that the intermodal presentation of information facilitates perception, prior research had suggested that early in infancy, mothers perform their actions in temporal synchrony with language. Further research revealed that this synchrony is a form of multimodal responsive behavior related to the child’s later language development. Expanding on these findings, this article explores the relationship between action–language synchrony and the acquisition of verbs. Using qualitative and quantitative methods, we analyzed the coordination of verbs and action in mothers’ input to six-month-old infants and related these maternal strategies to the infants’ later production of verbs. We found that the verbs used by mothers in these early interactions were tightly coordinated with the ongoing action and very frequently responsive to infant actions. It is concluded that use of these multimodal strategies could significantly predict the number of spoken verbs in infants’ vocabulary at 24 months.
IEEE Transactions on Autonomous Mental Development | 2011
Iris Nomikou; Katharina J. Rohlfing
Interaction Studies | 2013
Iris Nomikou; Katharina J. Rohlfing; Joanna Szufnarowska
Interaction Studies | 2016
Iris Nomikou; Malte Schilling; Vivien Heller; Katharina J. Rohlfing
Infant and Child Development | 2016
Iris Nomikou; Giuseppe Leonardi; Karharina J. Rohlfing; Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi
Language, Interaction and Acquisition | 2014
Katharina J. Rohlfing; Iris Nomikou