Hartshorne and Ullman (2006) presented naturalistic language data from 25 children (15 boys, 10 girls) and showed that girls produced more past tense overregularization errors than did boys. In particular, girls were more likely to overregularize irregular verbs whose stems share phonological similarities with regular verbs. It was argued that the result supported the Declarative/Procedural model of language, a neuropsychological analogue of the dual-route approach to language. In the current study we present experimental data that are inconsistent with these naturalistic data. Eighty children (40 males, 40 females) aged 5;0–6;9 completed a past tense elicitation task, a test of declarative memory, and a test of non-verbal intelligence. The results revealed no sex differences on any of the measures. Instead, the best predictors of overregularization rates were item-level features of the test verbs. We discuss the results within the context of dual versus single route debate on past tense acquisition.
History
Journal
Developmental science
Volume
11
Pagination
882 - 889
Location
Oxford, England
ISSN
1363-755X
eISSN
1467-7687
Language
eng
Notes
Published Online: 14 Oct 2008
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2008, The Authors & Blackwell Publishing Ltd (journal compilation)