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Linking sounds to meanings: Infant statistical learning in a natural language
Authors:Jessica F Hay  Bruna Pelucchi  Katharine Graf Estes  Jenny R Saffran
Institution:aDepartment of Psychology, University of Tennessee – Knoxville, United States;bDepartment of Psychology and Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin – Madison, United States;cDepartment of Evolutionary Biology, University of Ferrara, Italy;dDepartment of Psychology, University of California, Davis, United States
Abstract:The processes of infant word segmentation and infant word learning have largely been studied separately. However, the ease with which potential word forms are segmented from fluent speech seems likely to influence subsequent mappings between words and their referents. To explore this process, we tested the link between the statistical coherence of sequences presented in fluent speech and infants’ subsequent use of those sequences as labels for novel objects. Notably, the materials were drawn from a natural language unfamiliar to the infants (Italian). The results of three experiments suggest that there is a close relationship between the statistics of the speech stream and subsequent mapping of labels to referents. Mapping was facilitated when the labels contained high transitional probabilities in the forward and/or backward direction (Experiment 1). When no transitional probability information was available (Experiment 2), or when the internal transitional probabilities of the labels were low in both directions (Experiment 3), infants failed to link the labels to their referents. Word learning appears to be strongly influenced by infants’ prior experience with the distribution of sounds that make up words in natural languages.
Keywords:Infant language acquisition  Statistical learning  Speech segmentation  Word learning
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