Literature DB >> 29102857

Can infants learn phonology in the lab? A meta-analytic answer.

Alejandrina Cristia1.   

Abstract

Two of the key tasks facing the language-learning infant lie at the level of phonology: establishing which sounds are contrastive in the native inventory, and determining what their possible syllabic positions and permissible combinations (phonotactics) are. In 2002-2003, two theoretical proposals, one bearing on how infants can learn sounds (Maye, Werker, & Gerken, 2002) and the other on phonotactics (Chambers, Onishi, & Fisher, 2003), were put forward on the pages of Cognition, each supported by two laboratory experiments, wherein a group of infants was briefly exposed to a set of pseudo-words, and plausible phonological generalizations were tested subsequently. These two papers have received considerable attention from the general scientific community, and inspired a flurry of follow-up work. In the context of questions regarding the replicability of psychological science, the present work uses a meta-analytic approach to appraise extant empirical evidence for infant phonological learning in the laboratory. It is found that neither seminal finding (on learning sounds and learning phonotactics) holds up when close methodological replications are integrated, although less close methodological replications do provide some evidence in favor of the sound learning strand of work. Implications for authors and readers of this literature are drawn out. It would be desirable that additional mechanisms for phonological learning be explored, and that future infant laboratory work employ paradigms that rely on constrained and unambiguous links between experimental exposure and measured infant behavior.
Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Artificial grammars; Experimental psychology; Infant language learning; Replication

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29102857     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.09.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  11 in total

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8.  Behavioral and Neurodynamic Effects of Word Learning on Phonotactic Repair.

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9.  Do Infants Really Learn Phonetic Categories?

Authors:  Naomi H Feldman; Sharon Goldwater; Emmanuel Dupoux; Thomas Schatz
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10.  The profile of abstract rule learning in infancy: Meta-analytic and experimental evidence.

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