International audienceThere is growing evidence that, faced with a complex environment, participants subdivide the incoming information into small perceptual units, called chunks. Although statistical properties have been identified as playing a key role in chunking, we wanted to determine whether perceptual (repetitions) and positional (initial units) features might provide immediate guidance for the parsing of information into chunks. Children aged 5 and 8 years were exposed to sequences of 3, 4, or 5 colours. Sequence learning was assessed either through an explicit generation test (Experiment 1) or through a recognition test (Experiment 2). Experiment 1 showed that perceptual and positional saliencies benefited learning and that sensiti...
The basis of young children's performance of judgments of recency and frequency was investigated usi...
A new test of children’s flexible use of semantic cues for word learning extended previous results. ...
In studies on the development of cognitive processes, children are often grouped based on their ages...
International audienceThere is growing evidence that, faced with a complex environment, participants...
Children at 3, 4, and 5 years of age were given either conceptual sorting task (CST) or half-concept...
How do learners make sense of their intricately structured visual and auditory environments? One imp...
The literature suggests that visual statistical learning occurs from a very early age, with evidence...
Two experiments demonstrate that 5-month-olds are sensitive to local redundancy in visual-temporal s...
The spacing effect refers to increased retention following learning instances that are spaced out in...
Both adults and children --by the time they are two to three years old-- have a general ability to r...
We asked whether 11- and 14- month-old infants' abstract rule learning, an early form of analogical ...
The chunking hypothesis suggests that during the repeated exposure of stimulus material, information...
The experiments reported here investigated the development of a fundamental component of cognition: ...
International audienceChunking mechanisms are central to several cognitive processes and notably to ...
The two experiments in this paper provide a developmental approach to the decision- making patterns ...
The basis of young children's performance of judgments of recency and frequency was investigated usi...
A new test of children’s flexible use of semantic cues for word learning extended previous results. ...
In studies on the development of cognitive processes, children are often grouped based on their ages...
International audienceThere is growing evidence that, faced with a complex environment, participants...
Children at 3, 4, and 5 years of age were given either conceptual sorting task (CST) or half-concept...
How do learners make sense of their intricately structured visual and auditory environments? One imp...
The literature suggests that visual statistical learning occurs from a very early age, with evidence...
Two experiments demonstrate that 5-month-olds are sensitive to local redundancy in visual-temporal s...
The spacing effect refers to increased retention following learning instances that are spaced out in...
Both adults and children --by the time they are two to three years old-- have a general ability to r...
We asked whether 11- and 14- month-old infants' abstract rule learning, an early form of analogical ...
The chunking hypothesis suggests that during the repeated exposure of stimulus material, information...
The experiments reported here investigated the development of a fundamental component of cognition: ...
International audienceChunking mechanisms are central to several cognitive processes and notably to ...
The two experiments in this paper provide a developmental approach to the decision- making patterns ...
The basis of young children's performance of judgments of recency and frequency was investigated usi...
A new test of children’s flexible use of semantic cues for word learning extended previous results. ...
In studies on the development of cognitive processes, children are often grouped based on their ages...