Literature DB >> 22229490

Modeling cross-situational word-referent learning: prior questions.

Chen Yu1, Linda B Smith.   

Abstract

Both adults and young children possess powerful statistical computation capabilities--they can infer the referent of a word from highly ambiguous contexts involving many words and many referents by aggregating cross-situational statistical information across contexts. This ability has been explained by models of hypothesis testing and by models of associative learning. This article describes a series of simulation studies and analyses designed to understand the different learning mechanisms posited by the 2 classes of models and their relation to each other. Variants of a hypothesis-testing model and a simple or dumb associative mechanism were examined under different specifications of information selection, computation, and decision. Critically, these 3 components of the models interact in complex ways. The models illustrate a fundamental tradeoff between amount of data input and powerful computations: With the selection of more information, dumb associative models can mimic the powerful learning that is accomplished by hypothesis-testing models with fewer data. However, because of the interactions among the component parts of the models, the associative model can mimic various hypothesis-testing models, producing the same learning patterns but through different internal components. The simulations argue for the importance of a compositional approach to human statistical learning: the experimental decomposition of the processes that contribute to statistical learning in human learners and models with the internal components that can be evaluated independently and together.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22229490      PMCID: PMC3892274          DOI: 10.1037/a0026182

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Rev        ISSN: 0033-295X            Impact factor:   8.934


  63 in total

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  39 in total

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3.  Visual attention is not enough: Individual differences in statistical word-referent learning in infants.

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4.  Remember dax? Relations between children's cross-situational word learning, memory, and language abilities.

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Review 5.  The unrealized promise of infant statistical word-referent learning.

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6.  Retrieval dynamics and retention in cross-situational statistical word learning.

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8.  Pigeons acquire multiple categories in parallel via associative learning: a parallel to human word learning?

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9.  Beyond naïve cue combination: salience and social cues in early word learning.

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Review 10.  The role of partial knowledge in statistical word learning.

Authors:  Daniel Yurovsky; Damian C Fricker; Chen Yu; Linda B Smith
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2014-02
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