The effect of children’s prior knowledge and language abilities on their statistical learning

IF 2.4 2区 文学 Q1 LINGUISTICS Applied Psycholinguistics Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1017/S0142716422000273
Katja Stärk, E. Kidd, Rebecca L. A. Frost
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Statistical learning (SL) is assumed to lead to long-term memory representations. However, the way that those representations influence future learning remains largely unknown. We studied how children’s existing distributional linguistic knowledge influences their subsequent SL on a serial recall task, in which 49 German-speaking seven- to nine-year-old children repeated a series of six-syllable sequences. These contained either (i) bisyllabic words based on frequently occurring German syllable transitions (naturalistic sequences), (ii) bisyllabic words created from unattested syllable transitions (non-naturalistic sequences), or (iii) random syllable combinations (unstructured foils). Children demonstrated learning from naturalistic sequences from the beginning of the experiment, indicating that their implicit memory traces derived from their input language informed learning from the very early stages onward. Exploratory analyses indicated that children with a higher language proficiency were more accurate in repeating the sequences and improved most throughout the study compared to children with lower proficiency.
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儿童的先验知识和语言能力对其统计学习的影响
摘要统计学习(SL)被认为是导致长时记忆表征。然而,这些表征影响未来学习的方式在很大程度上仍然未知。在一项连续回忆任务中,我们研究了儿童现有的分布语言知识如何影响他们随后的语言表达。在该任务中,49名说德语的7至9岁儿童重复了一系列六音节序列。这些包含(i)基于频繁出现的德语音节转换(自然序列)的双音节单词,(ii)从未经证实的音节转换(非自然序列)创建的双音节单词,或(iii)随机的音节组合(非结构化的箔片)。孩子们从实验一开始就表现出从自然序列中学习,这表明他们的内隐记忆痕迹来自于他们的输入语言,从很早的阶段开始就影响了学习。探索性分析表明,与语言熟练程度较低的儿童相比,语言熟练程度较高的儿童在重复序列时更准确,并且在整个研究过程中进步最大。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.80%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: Applied Psycholinguistics publishes original research papers on the psychological processes involved in language. It examines language development , language use and language disorders in adults and children with a particular emphasis on cross-language studies. The journal gathers together the best work from a variety of disciplines including linguistics, psychology, reading, education, language learning, speech and hearing, and neurology. In addition to research reports, theoretical reviews will be considered for publication as will keynote articles and commentaries.
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