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Learning vocabulary and grammar from cross-situational statistics

Patrick Rebuschat, Padraic Monaghan, Christine Schoetensack

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)
152 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Across multiple situations, child and adult learners are sensitive to co-occurrences between individual words and their referents in the environment, which provide a means by which the ambiguity of word-world mappings may be resolved (Monaghan & Mattock, 2012; Scott & Fisher, 2012; Smith & Yu, 2008; Yu & Smith, 2007). In three studies, we tested whether cross-situational learning is sufficiently powerful to support simultaneous learning the referents for words from multiple grammatical categories, a more realistic reflection of more complex natural language learning situations. In Experiment 1, adult learners heard sentences comprising nouns, verbs, adjectives, and grammatical markers indicating subject and object roles, and viewed a dynamic scene to which the sentence referred. In Experiments 2 and 3, we further increased the uncertainty of the referents by presenting two scenes alongside each sentence. In all studies, we found that cross-situational statistical learning was sufficiently powerful to facilitate acquisition of both vocabulary and grammar from complex sentence-to-scene correspondences, simulating the situations that more closely resemble the challenge facing the language learner.
Original languageEnglish
Article number104475
Number of pages10
JournalCognition
Volume206
Early online date19/11/2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1/01/2021

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