News Release

Babies understand verbs at just 10 months, study shows

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of East Anglia

Babies understand verbs at just 10 months, study shows 

New research reveals that by 10 months old, infants are already beginning to understand verbs, before they even say their first words. 

The study, from the University of East Anglia and Cardiff University, is the first to test  

infants' understanding of verbs using brain imaging technology.  

The team measured brain rhythms to visualise babies’ understanding of these word classes.  

And they found that by 10 months, babies could detect inconsistencies between actions and the verbs describing them. 

Dr Kelsey Frewin, from UEA’s School of Psychology, carried out the work at Cardiff University. She said: “Around their first birthday, infants begin saying their first words. For many infants, these words will describe caregivers – such as Mama – or other important family members – such as dog - or prominent objects that feature frequently in their daily lives.  

“Children’s vocabularies continue to feature nouns heavily during early development despite language input from caregivers frequently incorporating other word types, such as verbs.  

“Learning the meaning of verbs is a complex task for babies, requiring them to segment verbs from speech, parse actions from motion, form action categories, and map verbs onto emerging action concepts. We wanted to further our understanding of when this happens in development.”  

The scientists used an electroencephalogram (EEG) - a baby-friendly test that records the brain's electrical rhythms using small sensors inside a stretchy cap – to capture word understanding from infants' brain rhythms.  

While sitting on their parents’ lap, 10-month-old infants watched videos of actions, paired either with a verb that was matched or mismatched to the action.  

The researchers also consider that the project’s findings could alternatively represent babies developing a sensitivity to co-occurrences between actions and verbs, which may serve as a precursor to later verb understanding.  

Future research will be necessary to understand better the nature of infant responses to action-verb mismatches.  

“Our findings suggest that 10-month-olds can detect action-verb mismatches. But so far, other research exploring the mechanisms that support verb understanding has mostly been conducted with much older infants and children, and so further investigation is needed to understand the processes that support this emerging verb understanding in the first year of life,” added Dr Frewin.  

The research was led by Cardiff University in collaboration with UEA and the University of Warwick.  

‘Electrophysiological evidence of infants’ understanding of verbs’ is published in the journal Cortex.  


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.