Lakshmi Gogate
Florida Gulf Coast University
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Featured researches published by Lakshmi Gogate.
Psychological Review | 2010
Lakshmi Gogate; George Hollich
In this article, we hypothesize that invariance detection, a general perceptual phenomenon whereby organisms attend to relatively stable patterns or regularities, is an important means by which infants tune in to various aspects of spoken language. In so doing, we synthesize a substantial body of research on detection of regularities across the domains of speech perception, word segmentation, word-referent mapping, and grammar learning. In addition, we outline our framework for how invariance detection might serve as a perceptual gateway to more sophisticated communication by providing a foundation for subsequent emergent capacities. We test our hypothesis using the domain of word mapping as a case in point, emphasizing its epigenetic nature: Word mapping is rooted in the real-time interactions between the infant and the physical world. The present account offers an alternative to prior theories of early language development and helps to link the field of early language development with more general perceptual processes.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2015
Lakshmi Gogate; Madhavilatha Maganti; Lorraine E. Bahrick
In a quasi-experimental study, 24 Asian Indian mothers were asked to teach novel (target) names for two objects and two actions to their children of three different levels of lexical mapping development: prelexical (5-8 months), early lexical (9-17 months), and advanced lexical (20-43 months). Target naming (n=1482) and non-target naming (other, n=2411) were coded for synchronous spoken words and object motion (multimodal motherese) and other naming styles. Indian mothers abundantly used multimodal motherese with target words to highlight novel word-referent relations, paralleling earlier findings from American mothers. They used it with target words more often for prelexical infants than for advanced lexical children and to name target actions later in childrens development. Unlike American mothers, Indian mothers also abundantly used multimodal motherese to name target objects later in childrens development. Finally, monolingual mothers who spoke a verb-dominant Indian language used multimodal motherese more often than bilingual mothers who also spoke noun-dominant English to their children. The findings suggest that within a dynamic and reciprocal mother-infant communication system, multimodal motherese adapts to unify novel words and referents across cultures. It adapts to childrens level of lexical development and to ambient language-specific lexical dominance hierarchies.
Pediatric Research | 2007
Christopher G. Prince; Lakshmi Gogate
Epigenetic Robotics: Behavioral Treatments and Potential New Models for Developmental Pediatrics
Archive | 2013
Lakshmi Gogate; George Hollich
The process of learning words and languages may seem like an instinctual trait, inherent to nearly all humans from a young age. However, a vast range of complex research and information exists in detailing the complexities of the process of word learning. Theoretical and Computational Models of Word Learning: Trends in Psychology and Artificial Intelligence strives to combine cross-disciplinary research into one comprehensive volume to help readers gain a fuller understanding of the developmental processes and influences that makeup the progression of word learning. Blending together developmental psychology and artificial intelligence, this publication is intended for researchers, practitioners, and educators who are interested in language learning and its development as well as computational models formed from these specific areas of research.
Developmental Neuropsychology | 2016
Lakshmi Gogate
Multidisciplinary research across the domains of cognitive development, speech, hearing, and educational sciences, field studies in cultural anthropology, and more recently, empirical research in a...
Developmental Neuropsychology | 2016
Lakshmi Gogate; George Hollich
ABSTRACT The authors provide an alternative to the traditional view that verbs are harder to learn than nouns by reviewing three lines of behavioral and neurophysiological evidence in word-mapping development across cultures. First, preverbal infants tune into word-action and word-object pairings using domain-general mechanisms. Second, while post-verbal infants from noun-friendly language environments experience verb-action mapping difficulty, infants from verb-friendly language environments do not. Third, children use language-specific conventions to learn all types of words, although still strongly influenced by their language environment. Additionally, the authors suggest neurophysiological research to advance these lines of evidence beyond traditional views of word learning.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2010
Lakshmi Gogate
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 2009
Lakshmi Gogate; Christopher G. Prince; Dalit J. Matatyaho
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2014
Dalit J. Matatyaho-Bullaro; Lakshmi Gogate; Zachary Mason; Steven Cadavid; Mohammed Abdel-Mottaleb
Infant Behavior & Development | 2013
Lakshmi Gogate; Madhavilatha Maganti; Kerry B. Laing