Welcome to the Indiana
University Baby Language Lab!
Mission Statement
Studies carried out in our laboratory are
designed to explore how children become fast and efficient
speakers of language. We are particularly interested in the
relation between language comprehension and production: how
children’s understanding and use of words change over time and
why there are gaps between what children know and what they
say.
Ongoing Projects
We are currently examining the development
of word retrieval abilities in typically developing children and
children with impairments in language. One question we ask is
in what ways everyday word retrieval failures, like
tip-of-the-tongue states, are similar to and different from the
word finding difficulties of children with specific language
impairments. Funding for these projects was provided by a grant from the National Science Foundation. A description of the research was featured in the US News & World Report and the IU News Room. Another line of research, in collaboration with Dr. Erin Hahn at Furman University, investigates children's understanding and use of novel words and actions. We are interested in the processes of embodiment, the idea that language comprehension and production are rooted in the perceptual and motor activity of the individual.
Department of
Speech And Hearing Sciences - Indiana University
200 S. Jordan Ave. Bloomington, IN 47405
Baby Language Lab Information: (812) 856-2424