Compared to children, adults are bad at learning language. This is counterintuitive; adults outperform children on most measures of cognition, especially those that involve effort (which continue to mature into early adulthood). The present study asks whether these mature effortful abilities interfere with language learning in adults and further, whether interference occurs equally for aspects of language that adults are good (word-segmentation) versus bad (grammar) at learning. Learners were exposed to an artificial language comprised of statistically defined words that belong to phonologically defined categories (grammar). Exposure occurred under passive or effortful conditions. Passive learners were told to listen while effortful learner...
This paper reports on a limited model of language evolution that incorporates transmission noise and...
Speakers constantly learn language from the environment by sampling their linguistic input and adjus...
There is general agreement in the Second Language Acquisition literature that there are age effects,...
<div><p>Compared to children, adults are bad at learning language. This is counterintuitive; adults ...
Compared to children, adults are bad at learning language. This is counterintuitive; adults outperfo...
Compared to young children, the language learning process is much more difficult and less successful...
This study followed up on a previous experiment, wherein adults were unable to learn a particular ty...
It is still an unresolved question why adults do not learn languages as effortlessly as children do....
It is still an unresolved question why adults do not learn languages as effortlessly as children do....
This dissertation examines how adult learning of novel language structures is affected by the charac...
It has been observed that the way adults and infants learn languages is vastly different; however, t...
This research aimed to analyze adults’ language aptitude towards a new language and to find out to w...
Why do children appear to learn languages more easily than adults? This lingering question, better k...
Mark Atkinson was supported by an Arts & Humanities Research Council PhD Studentship (AH/K503010/1)....
First language researchers have proposed dozens of explanations why infants across cultures seem to ...
This paper reports on a limited model of language evolution that incorporates transmission noise and...
Speakers constantly learn language from the environment by sampling their linguistic input and adjus...
There is general agreement in the Second Language Acquisition literature that there are age effects,...
<div><p>Compared to children, adults are bad at learning language. This is counterintuitive; adults ...
Compared to children, adults are bad at learning language. This is counterintuitive; adults outperfo...
Compared to young children, the language learning process is much more difficult and less successful...
This study followed up on a previous experiment, wherein adults were unable to learn a particular ty...
It is still an unresolved question why adults do not learn languages as effortlessly as children do....
It is still an unresolved question why adults do not learn languages as effortlessly as children do....
This dissertation examines how adult learning of novel language structures is affected by the charac...
It has been observed that the way adults and infants learn languages is vastly different; however, t...
This research aimed to analyze adults’ language aptitude towards a new language and to find out to w...
Why do children appear to learn languages more easily than adults? This lingering question, better k...
Mark Atkinson was supported by an Arts & Humanities Research Council PhD Studentship (AH/K503010/1)....
First language researchers have proposed dozens of explanations why infants across cultures seem to ...
This paper reports on a limited model of language evolution that incorporates transmission noise and...
Speakers constantly learn language from the environment by sampling their linguistic input and adjus...
There is general agreement in the Second Language Acquisition literature that there are age effects,...