Victoria Mateu
· PhDVerifiedUniversity of California, Los Angeles · Spanish and Portuguese
Active 2011–2024
Research topics
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Linguistics
- Mathematics
- Developmental psychology
- Communication
- Cognitive psychology
- Philosophy
Selected publications
Learning unaccusativity: Evidence for split intransitivity in child Spanish
Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America · 2023 · 1 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Linguistics
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
We examine four features of unaccusativity in child-directed and child Spanish to determine what cues children might use to distinguish unaccusative and unergative verbs. Two are cross-linguistic lexico-semantic features: Subjects of unaccusatives are patients so we expect more inanimate subjects with unaccusatives; and unaccusatives tend to have an endpoint, hence may occur more frequently with perfective aspect. The other two are language-specific morphosyntactic features: VS order is grammatical with unaccusatives but not unergatives, and many unaccusative verbs allow/require the anticausative se clitic. We find all four features robustly in children's input and that even 1-2-year-olds show discriminate use of them.
A Multilab Study of Bilingual Infants: Exploring the Preference for Infant-Directed Speech
Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science · 2021 · 77 citations
- Sociology
- Psychology
- Developmental psychology
From the earliest months of life, infants prefer listening to and learn better from infant-directed speech (IDS) than adult-directed speech (ADS). Yet, IDS differs within communities, across languages, and across cultures, both in form and in prevalence. This large-scale, multi-site study used the diversity of bilingual infant experiences to explore the impact of different types of linguistic experience on infants' IDS preference. As part of the multi-lab ManyBabies 1 project, we compared lab-matched samples of 333 bilingual and 385 monolingual infants' preference for North-American English IDS (cf. ManyBabies Consortium, 2020: ManyBabies 1), tested in 17 labs in 7 countries. Those infants were tested in two age groups: 6-9 months (the younger sample) and 12-15 months (the older sample). We found that bilingual and monolingual infants both preferred IDS to ADS, and did not differ in terms of the overall magnitude of this preference. However, amongst bilingual infants who were acquiring North-American English (NAE) as a native language, greater exposure to NAE was associated with a stronger IDS preference, extending the previous finding from ManyBabies 1 that monolinguals learning NAE as a native language showed a stronger preference than infants unexposed to NAE. Together, our findings indicate that IDS preference likely makes a similar contribution to monolingual and bilingual development, and that infants are exquisitely sensitive to the nature and frequency of different types of language input in their early environments.
Frequent coauthors
- 6 shared
Nina Hyams
University of California, Los Angeles
- 5 shared
Megha Sundara
- 3 shared
Christina Bergmann
- 2 shared
Anne-Caroline Fiévet
École des hautes études en sciences sociales
- 2 shared
Naomi Havron
University of Haifa
- 2 shared
Michael C. Frank
Stanford University
- 2 shared
Casey Lew‐Williams
Princeton University
- 2 shared
Nivedita Mani
University of Göttingen
Education
- 2016
Ph.D. in Linguistics, Linguistics
University of California Los Angeles
- 2013
M.A. in Linguistics, Linguistics
University of California Los Angeles
- 2011
B.A. in English Philology, Filología Inglesa
University of Granada
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