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Tuning in to Non-adjacencies: Exposure to Learnable Patterns Supports Discovering Otherwise Difficult Structures

Overview
Journal Cognition
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychology
Date 2020 Jul 6
PMID 32623134
Citations 1
Authors
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Abstract

Non-adjacent dependencies are ubiquitous in language, but difficult to learn in artificial language experiments in the lab. Previous research suggests that non-adjacent dependencies are more learnable given structural support in the input - for instance, in the presence of high variability between dependent items. However, not all non-adjacent dependencies occur in supportive contexts. How are such regularities learned? One possibility is that learning one set of non-adjacent dependencies can highlight similar structures in subsequent input, facilitating the acquisition of new non-adjacent dependencies that are otherwise difficult to learn. In three experiments, we show that prior exposure to learnable non-adjacent dependencies - i.e., dependencies presented in a learning context that has been shown to facilitate discovery - improves learning of novel non-adjacent regularities that are typically not detected. These findings demonstrate how the discovery of complex linguistic structures can build on past learning in supportive contexts.

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The Influence of Memory on Visual Perception in Infants, Children, and Adults.

Jaffe-Dax S, Potter C, Leung T, Emberson L, Lew-Williams C Cogn Sci. 2023; 47(11):e13381.

PMID: 37988257 PMC: 10754275. DOI: 10.1111/cogs.13381.

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