Letitia Naigles
Professor
Degree: | Ph.D., 1988. University of Pennsylvania |
Webpages: | UConn Child Language Lab; UConn K.I.D.S. |
Research Interests: | Language acquisition across languages and etiologies |
Research Synopsis: | How do young children acquire language? My research focuses on the interacting roles of linguistic input and linguistic/cognitive/social/neurological predispositions in childrenâs acquisition of word meanings, sentence structures, and discourse patterns. I consider both typically developing children and children who have been diagnosed with autism; I also consider how the processes of language acquisition might vary with the specific language being learned. |
Courses: | Developmental (2400); Language Development (3470 at the undergrad level, 5440 at the graduate level); Lab in Developmental (3450W), Neurobiology of Language: Typical and Atypical Language and Cognitive Development (5445/COGS 5140) |
Recent publications: | 1. Naigles, L.R. (Ed.)(2017) Innovative Investigations of Language in Autism Spectrum Disorder. NY: APA Books/Walter deGruyter.
2. Matsuo, A., Naigles, L.R., Wood, G., & Kita, S. (2016) Children’s use of morphosyntax and argument structure to infer the meaning of novel transitive and intransitive verbs. In T. Kageyama & W. Jacobsen (Eds.) Transitivity and Valency Alternations: Studies on Japanese and Beyond (pp. 341-356). De Grutyer: Mouton. 3. Jyotishi, M., Fein, D., & Naigles, L. (2017) Investigating the Grammatical and Pragmatic Origins of Wh-Questions in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Frontiers in Cognitive Science. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00319 4. Wittke, K., Mastergeorge, A., Ozonoff, S., Rogers, S. & Naigles, L. (2017) Grammatical Impairment and Autism Spectrum Disorder: Exploring Language Phenotypes Beyond Standardized Testing. Frontiers in Language Sciences. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00532 |
Representative Publications: | 1. Goodwin, A., Fein, D., & Naigles, L. (2015) The role of maternal input in the development of wh-question comprehension in autism and typical development. Journal of Child Language 42, 32-63. 2. Tek, S., Mesite, L., Fein, D., & Naigles, L.R. (2014) Longitudinal Analyses of Expressive Language Development Reveal Two Distinct Language Profiles among Young Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 44, 75-89.3. Naigles, L.R., Kelley, E., Troyb, E., & Fein, D. (2013) Residual difficulties with categorical induction in children with a history of autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 43, 2048-2061.  doi:10.1007/s10803-012-1754-y 4. Candan, A., Küntay, A., Yeh, Y., Cheung, H., Wagner, L., & Naigles, L. (2012) Age and language effects in childrenâs processing of word order. Cognitive Development 27, 205-221. 5. Naigles, L., and Terrazas, P. (1998) Motion verb generalizations in English and Spanish: Influences of language and syntax. Psychological Science 9, 363-369.
6. Naigles, L.R. (2002) Form is easy, meaning is hard: Resolving a paradox in early child language. Cognition 86, 157-199.
7. Naigles, L.R., Hoff, E. & Vear, D. (2009) Flexibility in early verb use: Evidence from a multiple-n diary study. Monographs for the Society for Research in Child Development, Vol. 74, No. 2. |
Professional Activities: | Cognitive Science Executive Committee
UConn KIDS
CT Institute for Brain & Cognitive Science
Former Associate Editor, Journal of Child Language
Fellow, Association for Psychological Science (2009)
Visiting Professor of Psychiatry, MIND Institute (2013)
Visiting Professor, Koç University, Turkey (2004-2005)
Research Funding from NIDCD, NIHCD, NIMH, NSF |

letitia.naigles@uconn.edu | |
Phone | 860.486.4942 |
Mailing Address | Unit 1020 |
Office Location | Bousfield 141 |