Literature DB >> 23730217

Rhythmic grouping biases constrain infant statistical learning.

Jessica F Hay1, Jenny R Saffran.   

Abstract

Linguistic stress and sequential statistical cues to word boundaries interact during speech segmentation in infancy. However, little is known about how the different acoustic components of stress constrain statistical learning. The current studies were designed to investigate whether intensity and duration each function independently as cues to initial prominence (trochaic-based hypothesis) or whether, as predicted by the Iambic-Trochaic Law (ITL), intensity and duration have characteristic and separable effects on rhythmic grouping (ITL-based hypothesis) in a statistical learning task. Infants were familiarized with an artificial language (Experiments 1 & 3) or a tone stream (Experiment 2) in which there was an alternation in either intensity or duration. In addition to potential acoustic cues, the familiarization sequences also contained statistical cues to word boundaries. In speech (Experiment 1) and non-speech (Experiment 2) conditions, 9-month-old infants demonstrated discrimination patterns consistent with an ITL-based hypothesis: intensity signaled initial prominence and duration signaled final prominence. The results of Experiment 3, in which 6.5-month-old infants were familiarized with the speech streams from Experiment 1, suggest that there is a developmental change in infants' willingness to treat increased duration as a cue to word offsets in fluent speech. Infants' perceptual systems interact with linguistic experience to constrain how infants learn from their auditory environment.

Entities:  

Keywords:  language acquisition; linguistic stress; perceptual biases; rhythmic grouping; speech segmentation; statistical learning

Year:  2012        PMID: 23730217      PMCID: PMC3667627          DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-7078.2011.00110.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infancy        ISSN: 1532-7078


  46 in total

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  15 in total

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Authors:  Juan M Toro; Marina Nespor
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8.  Advancing Our Understanding of the Link between Statistical Learning and Language Acquisition: The Need for Longitudinal Data.

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10.  Early syllabic segmentation of fluent speech by infants acquiring French.

Authors:  Louise Goyet; Léo-Lyuki Nishibayashi; Thierry Nazzi
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