Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy

Adults’ linguistic background influences their sequential statistical learning of an artificial language characterized by conflicting forward-going and backward-going transitional probabilities. English-speaking adults favor backward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with the head-initial...

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Main Authors: Thiessen, Erik D., Onnis, Luca, Hong, Soo-Jong, Lee, Kyung-Sook
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151425
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1514252021-06-24T03:06:52Z Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy Thiessen, Erik D. Onnis, Luca Hong, Soo-Jong Lee, Kyung-Sook School of Humanities Social sciences::Psychology Statistical Learning Linguistics Adults’ linguistic background influences their sequential statistical learning of an artificial language characterized by conflicting forward-going and backward-going transitional probabilities. English-speaking adults favor backward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with the head-initial structure of English. Korean-speaking adults favor forward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with the head-final structure of Korean. These experiments assess when infants develop this directional bias. In the experiments, 7-month-old infants showed no bias for forward-going or backward-going regularities. By 13 months, however, English-learning infants favored backward-going transitional probabilities over forward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with English-speaking adults. This indicates that statistical learning rapidly adapts to the predominant syntactic structure of the native language. Such adaptation may facilitate subsequent learning by highlighting statistical structures that are likely to be informative in the native linguistic environment. Ministry of Education (MOE) We are grateful to Sook Whan Cho and Hongoak Yun for facilitating data collection at Asan Hospital in Seoul, South Korea, and Jae-un Kim and Young-In Lee for running Experiment 2. Support came from a Start Up Grant and a Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 1 grant (RG81/14) to L.O. 2021-06-24T03:06:52Z 2021-06-24T03:06:52Z 2019 Journal Article Thiessen, E. D., Onnis, L., Hong, S. & Lee, K. (2019). Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 177, 211-221. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2018.04.009 0022-0965 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151425 10.1016/j.jecp.2018.04.009 30227354 2-s2.0-85053431952 177 211 221 en RG81/14 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology © 2018 Elsevier. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Statistical Learning
Linguistics
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Statistical Learning
Linguistics
Thiessen, Erik D.
Onnis, Luca
Hong, Soo-Jong
Lee, Kyung-Sook
Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
description Adults’ linguistic background influences their sequential statistical learning of an artificial language characterized by conflicting forward-going and backward-going transitional probabilities. English-speaking adults favor backward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with the head-initial structure of English. Korean-speaking adults favor forward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with the head-final structure of Korean. These experiments assess when infants develop this directional bias. In the experiments, 7-month-old infants showed no bias for forward-going or backward-going regularities. By 13 months, however, English-learning infants favored backward-going transitional probabilities over forward-going transitional probabilities, consistent with English-speaking adults. This indicates that statistical learning rapidly adapts to the predominant syntactic structure of the native language. Such adaptation may facilitate subsequent learning by highlighting statistical structures that are likely to be informative in the native linguistic environment.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Thiessen, Erik D.
Onnis, Luca
Hong, Soo-Jong
Lee, Kyung-Sook
format Article
author Thiessen, Erik D.
Onnis, Luca
Hong, Soo-Jong
Lee, Kyung-Sook
author_sort Thiessen, Erik D.
title Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
title_short Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
title_full Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
title_fullStr Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
title_full_unstemmed Early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
title_sort early developing syntactic knowledge influences sequential statistical learning in infancy
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151425
_version_ 1703971211862605824