Infants readily extract linguistic rules from speech. Here, we ask whether this advantage extends to linguistic stimuli that do not rely on the spoken modality. To address this question, we first examine whether infants can differentially learn rules from linguistic signs. We show that, despite having no previous experience with a sign language, six-month-old infants can extract the reduplicative rule (AA) from dynamic linguistic signs, and the neural response to reduplicative linguistic signs differs from reduplicative visual controls, matched for the dynamic spatiotemporal properties of signs. We next demonstrate that the brain response for reduplicative signs is similar to the response to reduplicative speech stimuli. Rule learning, then...
Productivity—the hallmark of linguistic competence—is typically attributed to algebraic rules that s...
Claims that signing with infants benefits language development are examined. Fourteen infants aged 1...
Learning a spoken language presupposes efficient auditory functions. In the present event-related po...
Infants readily extract linguistic rules from speech. Here, we ask whether this advantage extends to...
<div><p>Infants appear to learn abstract rule-like regularities (e.g., <em>la la da</em> follows an ...
Previous research indicates that infants generalize syntactic-like structures to novel exemplars in ...
Human infants possess powerful learning mechanisms used for the acquisition of language. To what ext...
Seven month old infants can learn simple repetition patterns, such as we-fo-we, and generalize the r...
Productivity—the hallmark of linguistic competence—is typically attributed to algebraic rules that s...
The advent of behavior-independent measures of cognition and major progress in experimental designs ...
Item does not contain fulltextWe conducted a close replication of the seminal work by Marcus et al. ...
In language, grammatical dependencies often hold between items that are not immediately adjacent to ...
This paper reports three experiments on infants’ sign learning. In order for an infant to learn a sp...
Abstracting the structure or 'rules' underlying observed patterns is central to mature cognition, ye...
International audienceHumans' ability to create and manipulate symbolic structures far exceeds that ...
Productivity—the hallmark of linguistic competence—is typically attributed to algebraic rules that s...
Claims that signing with infants benefits language development are examined. Fourteen infants aged 1...
Learning a spoken language presupposes efficient auditory functions. In the present event-related po...
Infants readily extract linguistic rules from speech. Here, we ask whether this advantage extends to...
<div><p>Infants appear to learn abstract rule-like regularities (e.g., <em>la la da</em> follows an ...
Previous research indicates that infants generalize syntactic-like structures to novel exemplars in ...
Human infants possess powerful learning mechanisms used for the acquisition of language. To what ext...
Seven month old infants can learn simple repetition patterns, such as we-fo-we, and generalize the r...
Productivity—the hallmark of linguistic competence—is typically attributed to algebraic rules that s...
The advent of behavior-independent measures of cognition and major progress in experimental designs ...
Item does not contain fulltextWe conducted a close replication of the seminal work by Marcus et al. ...
In language, grammatical dependencies often hold between items that are not immediately adjacent to ...
This paper reports three experiments on infants’ sign learning. In order for an infant to learn a sp...
Abstracting the structure or 'rules' underlying observed patterns is central to mature cognition, ye...
International audienceHumans' ability to create and manipulate symbolic structures far exceeds that ...
Productivity—the hallmark of linguistic competence—is typically attributed to algebraic rules that s...
Claims that signing with infants benefits language development are examined. Fourteen infants aged 1...
Learning a spoken language presupposes efficient auditory functions. In the present event-related po...