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Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories: how high frequency words assist language acquisition

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories: how high frequency words assist language acquisition. / Frost, Rebecca Louise Ann; Monaghan, Padraic John; Christiansen, Morten H.
2016. Paper presented at 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Frost, RLA, Monaghan, PJ & Christiansen, MH 2016, 'Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories: how high frequency words assist language acquisition', Paper presented at 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, United States, 11/09/13 - 13/09/14. <http://goo.gl/7jcikW>

APA

Frost, R. L. A., Monaghan, P. J., & Christiansen, M. H. (2016). Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories: how high frequency words assist language acquisition. Paper presented at 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, United States. http://goo.gl/7jcikW

Vancouver

Frost RLA, Monaghan PJ, Christiansen MH. Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories: how high frequency words assist language acquisition. 2016. Paper presented at 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, United States.

Author

Frost, Rebecca Louise Ann ; Monaghan, Padraic John ; Christiansen, Morten H. / Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories : how high frequency words assist language acquisition. Paper presented at 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, United States.

Bibtex

@conference{18a81ef2c5ec423caaf071c087e17b55,
title = "Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories: how high frequency words assist language acquisition",
abstract = "Recent studies suggest that high-frequency words may benefit speech segmentation (Bortfeld, Morgan, Golinkoff, & Rathbun, 2005) and grammatical categorisation (Monaghan, Christiansen, & Chater, 2007). To date, these tasks have been examined separately, but not together. We familiarised adults with continuous speech comprising repetitions of target words, and compared learning to a language in which targets appeared alongside high-frequency marker words. Marker words reliably preceded targets, and distinguished them into two otherwise unidentifiable categories. Participants completed a 2AFC segmentation test, and a similarity judgement categorisation test. We tested transfer to a wordpicture mapping task, where words from each category were used either consistently or inconsistently to label actions/objects. Participants segmented the speech successfully, but only demonstrated effective categorisation when speech contained high-frequency marker words. The advantage of marker words extended to the early stages of the transfer task. Findings indicate the same high-frequency words may assist speech segmentation and grammatical categorisation",
author = "Frost, {Rebecca Louise Ann} and Monaghan, {Padraic John} and Christiansen, {Morten H.}",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
language = "English",
note = "38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, CogSci 2016 ; Conference date: 11-09-2013 Through 13-09-2014",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Using statistics to learn words and grammatical categories

T2 - 38th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society

AU - Frost, Rebecca Louise Ann

AU - Monaghan, Padraic John

AU - Christiansen, Morten H.

PY - 2016/8

Y1 - 2016/8

N2 - Recent studies suggest that high-frequency words may benefit speech segmentation (Bortfeld, Morgan, Golinkoff, & Rathbun, 2005) and grammatical categorisation (Monaghan, Christiansen, & Chater, 2007). To date, these tasks have been examined separately, but not together. We familiarised adults with continuous speech comprising repetitions of target words, and compared learning to a language in which targets appeared alongside high-frequency marker words. Marker words reliably preceded targets, and distinguished them into two otherwise unidentifiable categories. Participants completed a 2AFC segmentation test, and a similarity judgement categorisation test. We tested transfer to a wordpicture mapping task, where words from each category were used either consistently or inconsistently to label actions/objects. Participants segmented the speech successfully, but only demonstrated effective categorisation when speech contained high-frequency marker words. The advantage of marker words extended to the early stages of the transfer task. Findings indicate the same high-frequency words may assist speech segmentation and grammatical categorisation

AB - Recent studies suggest that high-frequency words may benefit speech segmentation (Bortfeld, Morgan, Golinkoff, & Rathbun, 2005) and grammatical categorisation (Monaghan, Christiansen, & Chater, 2007). To date, these tasks have been examined separately, but not together. We familiarised adults with continuous speech comprising repetitions of target words, and compared learning to a language in which targets appeared alongside high-frequency marker words. Marker words reliably preceded targets, and distinguished them into two otherwise unidentifiable categories. Participants completed a 2AFC segmentation test, and a similarity judgement categorisation test. We tested transfer to a wordpicture mapping task, where words from each category were used either consistently or inconsistently to label actions/objects. Participants segmented the speech successfully, but only demonstrated effective categorisation when speech contained high-frequency marker words. The advantage of marker words extended to the early stages of the transfer task. Findings indicate the same high-frequency words may assist speech segmentation and grammatical categorisation

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 11 September 2013 through 13 September 2014

ER -