Constraints on infants' ability to extract non-adjacent dependencies from vowels and consonants

Autor(en): Weyers, Ivonne
Maennel, Claudia
Mueller, Jutta L.
Stichwörter: 1ST YEAR; Artificial language; COMPUTATIONS; Consonants; EEG; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; Language acquisition; LANGUAGE-ACQUISITION; LEXICAL SELECTION; MISMATCH NEGATIVITY; Neurosciences; Neurosciences & Neurology; Non-adjacent dependency; PERCEPTION; Psychology; Psychology, Developmental; SEGMENTATION; SPEECH; Vowels; WORD RECONSTRUCTION
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Herausgeber: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Enthalten in: DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Band: 57
Zusammenfassung: 
Language acquisition requires infants' ability to track dependencies between distant speech elements. Infants as young as 3 months have been shown to successfully identify such non-adjacent dependencies between syllables, and this ability has been related to the maturity of infants' pitch processing. The present study tested whether 8 -to 10-month-old infants (N = 68) can also learn dependencies at smaller segmental levels and whether the relation between dependency and pitch processing extends to other auditory features. Infants heard either syllable sequences encoding an item-specific dependency between non-adjacent vowels or between consonants. These frequent standard sequences were interspersed with infrequent intensity deviants and dependency deviants, which violated the non-adjacent relationship. Both vowel and consonant groups showed electrophysio-logical evidence for detection of the intensity manipulation. However, evidence for dependency learning was only found for infants hearing the dependencies across vowels, not consonants, and only in a subgroup of infants who had an above-average language score in a behavioral test. In a correlation analysis, we found no relation between intensity and dependency processing. We conclude that item-specific, segment-based non-adjacent dependencies are not easily learned by infants and if so, vowels are more accessible to the task, but only to infants who display advanced language skills.
ISSN: 1878-9293
DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101149

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