To achieve language proficiency, infants must find the building blocks of speech and master the rules governing their legal combinations. However, these problems are linked: words are also built according to rules. Here, we explored early morphosyntactic sensitivity by testing when and how infants could find either words or within-word structure in artificial speech snippets embodying properties of morphological constructions. We show that 12-month-olds use statistical relationships between syllables to extract words from continuous streams, but find word-internal regularities only if the streams are segmented. Seven-month-olds fail both tasks. Thus, 12-month-olds infants possess the resources to analyze the internal composition of words if...
The acoustic variation in language presents learners with a substantial challenge. To learn by track...
The advent of behavior-independent measures of cognition and major progress in experimental designs ...
The present study aims to better pinpoint the amount of exposure a 7.5-month-old infant requires to ...
To achieve language proficiency, infants must find the building blocks of speech and master the rule...
In order to acquire language, infants must extract its building blocks words and master the rules go...
<p>To efficiently segment fluent speech, infants must discover the predominant phonological form of ...
To acquire language proficiently, learners have to segment fluent speech into units – that is, word...
To acquire language, infants must learn how to identify words and linguistic structure in speech. St...
Infants parse speech into word-sized units according to biases that develop in the first year. One b...
Past research has demonstrated that infants can rapidly extract syllable distribution information fr...
Numerous studies over the past decade support the claim that infants are equipped with powerful stat...
Eight experiments tested the hypothesis that infants ' word segmentation abilities are reducibl...
One of the issues in infants’ language acquisition is - how do infants findword-like forms from flue...
nfants start learning words, the building blocks of language, at least by 6 months. To do so, they m...
Native language statistical regularities about allowable phoneme combinations (i.e., phonotactic pat...
The acoustic variation in language presents learners with a substantial challenge. To learn by track...
The advent of behavior-independent measures of cognition and major progress in experimental designs ...
The present study aims to better pinpoint the amount of exposure a 7.5-month-old infant requires to ...
To achieve language proficiency, infants must find the building blocks of speech and master the rule...
In order to acquire language, infants must extract its building blocks words and master the rules go...
<p>To efficiently segment fluent speech, infants must discover the predominant phonological form of ...
To acquire language proficiently, learners have to segment fluent speech into units – that is, word...
To acquire language, infants must learn how to identify words and linguistic structure in speech. St...
Infants parse speech into word-sized units according to biases that develop in the first year. One b...
Past research has demonstrated that infants can rapidly extract syllable distribution information fr...
Numerous studies over the past decade support the claim that infants are equipped with powerful stat...
Eight experiments tested the hypothesis that infants ' word segmentation abilities are reducibl...
One of the issues in infants’ language acquisition is - how do infants findword-like forms from flue...
nfants start learning words, the building blocks of language, at least by 6 months. To do so, they m...
Native language statistical regularities about allowable phoneme combinations (i.e., phonotactic pat...
The acoustic variation in language presents learners with a substantial challenge. To learn by track...
The advent of behavior-independent measures of cognition and major progress in experimental designs ...
The present study aims to better pinpoint the amount of exposure a 7.5-month-old infant requires to ...