Literature DB >> 25359600

Dense neighborhoods and mechanisms of learning: evidence from children with phonological delay.

Judith A Gierut1, Michele L Morrisette1.   

Abstract

There is a noted advantage of dense neighborhoods in language acquisition, but the learning mechanism that drives the effect is not well understood. Two hypotheses--long-term auditory word priming and phonological working memory--have been advanced in the literature as viable accounts. These were evaluated in two treatment studies enrolling twelve children with phonological delay. Study 1 exposed children to dense neighbors versus non-neighbors before training sound production in evaluation of the priming hypothesis. Study 2 exposed children to the same stimuli after training sound production as a test of the phonological working memory hypothesis. Results showed that neighbors led to greater phonological generalization than non-neighbors, but only when presented prior to training production. There was little generalization and no differential effect of exposure to neighbors or non-neighbors after training production. Priming was thus supported as a possible mechanism of learning behind the dense neighborhood advantage in phonological acquisition.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25359600      PMCID: PMC4691351          DOI: 10.1017/S0305000914000701

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Lang        ISSN: 0305-0009


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