Since infants over-specify acoustic details, segregate exemplars by talker voice, and need enough variation to generalize across exemplars, it has been questioned whether sleep would promote generalization in 12-month-old infants even after they have been exposed to multiple speakers. In order to investigate this question, we placed infants in either a nap or non-nap condition to test whether they were able to generalize only after napping. Sleep was expected to result in retention of the grammatical pattern over acoustic details such as talker voice. These results were not expected for infants who did not nap after being familiarized with a grammatical structure and who remained awake between training and testing for an equal amount of tim...
Grammar learning requires memory for dependencies between nonadjacent elements in speech. Immediate ...
Recent research on how sleep influences cognitive processes has pointed to the potential role of sle...
The constraints that govern acceptable phoneme combinations in speech perception and production have...
Research has shown that young children tend to pay more attention to objects than to the motions of ...
Sleep enhances generalization in adults, but this has not been examined in toddlers. This study exam...
Research investigating the role of sleep in infant language learning has yielded several important r...
At a young age children are able to acquire new verbs constantly. Two factors influencing this abili...
The relationship between sleep and language during infancy has not attracted a great deal of scrutin...
Across the lifespan, learners capitalize on regularities in language to find words in fluent speech ...
This study tested whether 17-month-olds that were more or less rested attended differentially to lea...
Generalization-the ability to abstract regularities from specific examples and apply them to novel i...
Sleep consolidates memory and promotes generalization in adults, but it is still unknown to what ext...
Sleep has been shown to aid a variety of learning and memory processes in adults (Stickgold, 2005). ...
In the present study, we examined the effect of sleep on the flexibility of declarative memory retri...
Research has shown that being exposed to a High variability of words in a new language, over less wo...
Grammar learning requires memory for dependencies between nonadjacent elements in speech. Immediate ...
Recent research on how sleep influences cognitive processes has pointed to the potential role of sle...
The constraints that govern acceptable phoneme combinations in speech perception and production have...
Research has shown that young children tend to pay more attention to objects than to the motions of ...
Sleep enhances generalization in adults, but this has not been examined in toddlers. This study exam...
Research investigating the role of sleep in infant language learning has yielded several important r...
At a young age children are able to acquire new verbs constantly. Two factors influencing this abili...
The relationship between sleep and language during infancy has not attracted a great deal of scrutin...
Across the lifespan, learners capitalize on regularities in language to find words in fluent speech ...
This study tested whether 17-month-olds that were more or less rested attended differentially to lea...
Generalization-the ability to abstract regularities from specific examples and apply them to novel i...
Sleep consolidates memory and promotes generalization in adults, but it is still unknown to what ext...
Sleep has been shown to aid a variety of learning and memory processes in adults (Stickgold, 2005). ...
In the present study, we examined the effect of sleep on the flexibility of declarative memory retri...
Research has shown that being exposed to a High variability of words in a new language, over less wo...
Grammar learning requires memory for dependencies between nonadjacent elements in speech. Immediate ...
Recent research on how sleep influences cognitive processes has pointed to the potential role of sle...
The constraints that govern acceptable phoneme combinations in speech perception and production have...