Eve V. Clark
· Richard Lyman Professor in the Humanities, EmeritaVerifiedStanford University · Linguistics
Active 1968–2024
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Linguistics
- Psychology
- Artificial Intelligence
- Natural Language Processing
- Philosophy
- History
- Mathematics
- Mathematics education
Selected publications
Language development in the early years
Elsevier eBooks · 2022 · 5 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Artificial Intelligence
- Linguistics
A gradualist view of word meaning in language acquisition and language use
Journal of Linguistics · 2022 · 6 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Linguistics
- Psychology
For both children and adults, communicating with each other effectively depends on having enough knowledge about particular entities, actions, or relations to understand and produce the words being used. Speakers draw on conventional meanings shared with their interlocutors, but do they share every detail of word meaning? They need not have identical, or fully specified, representations for the meanings of all the terms they make use of. Rather, they need only have represented enough about the meanings of the words used by another speaker to understand what is intended in context on a particular occasion. Reliance on partial meanings is common in both children and adults. More detailed, shared, representations of word meanings for a domain depend on acquiring additional knowledge about that domain and its contents.
Conversational Repair and the Acquisition of Language
Discourse Processes · 2020 · 49 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Natural Language Processing
- Computer Science
In this article, I examine how repairs in adult-child conversations guide children’s acquisition of language. Children make unprompted self-repairs to their utterances. They also respond to prompts for repair, whether open (Hm?, What?) or restricted (You hid what?), and to restricted offers (Child: I falled, Adult: You fell?). Children respond to clarification requests with self-repairs in the next turn, and make use of the feedback offered. The contrast between their utterance and the adult utterance identifies the locus of the error (negative feedback), while the adult’s offer presents a conventional version of the child’s utterance (positive feedback). I describe the use of restricted offers in conversations with children acquiring English and French, then present two case studies of how these inform children about homophonous French verb forms and early opaque Hebrew verb uses. These findings demonstrate the fundamental role of repair in the acquisition of a first language.
Recent grants
Pragmatics, Metalanguage, and Addressee-Uptake in Language Acquisition
NSF · $233k · 1998–2002
NIH · $159k · 1987
Frequent coauthors
- 11 shared
Edy Veneziano
Université Paris Cité
- 9 shared
Evan Kent
Center for Applied Linguistics
- 9 shared
Ari Y. Kelman
Stanford University
- 9 shared
Sam Weiss
University of Southern California
- 9 shared
Samuel C. Heílman
- 9 shared
Shani Bechhofer
University of Southern California
- 9 shared
Mary C. Rose
Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion
- 9 shared
Jill Jacobs
University of Southern California
Education
- 1969
PhD, Linguistics
University of Edinburgh
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