Abstract

Infants show impressive speech decoding abilities and detect acoustic regularities that highlight the syntactic relations of a language, often coded via non-adjacent dependencies (NADs, e.g., is singing). It has been claimed that infants learn NADs implicitly and associatively through passive listening and that there is a shift from effortless associative learning to a more controlled learning of NADs after the age of 2 years, potentially driven by the maturation of the prefrontal cortex. To investigate if older children are able to learn NADs, Lammertink et al. (2019) recently developed a word-monitoring serial reaction time (SRT) task and could show that 6–11-year-old children learned the NADs, as their reaction times (RTs) increased then they were presented with violated NADs. In the current study we adapted their experimental paradigm and tested NAD learning in a younger group of 52 children between the age of 4–8 years in a remote, web-based, game-like setting (whack-a-mole). Children were exposed to Italian phrases containing NADs and had to monitor the occurrence of a target syllable, which was the second element of the NAD. After exposure, children did a “Stem Completion” task in which they were presented with the first element of the NAD and had to choose the second element of the NAD to complete the stimuli. Our findings show that, despite large variability in the data, children aged 4–8 years are sensitive to NADs; they show the expected differences in r RTs in the SRT task and could transfer the NAD-rule in the Stem Completion task. We discuss these results with respect to the development of NAD dependency learning in childhood and the practical impact and limitations of collecting these data in a web-based setting.

Highlights

  • To acquire their native language, infants have to learn the words and the rule-based relations between the individual words, which make up the syntax of that language

  • The disruption effect was indicated by a 103.56 ms increase in reaction times (RTs) in the disruption block compared to the second learning block [t = +2.04; p = 0.04; 95% CI (0.00, 0.09)]

  • We examined children’s ability to learn non-adjacent dependencies (NADs) within an active word-monitoring serial reaction time (SRT) task set up as a web-based computer game with the objective of measuring NAD sensitivity in novel natural language stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

To acquire their native language, infants have to learn the words and the rule-based relations between the individual words, which make up the syntax of that language Some of these grammatical rules, known as non-adjacent dependencies (NADs), consist of statistically reliable relationships between two speech elements separated by intervening elements. Evidence from electrophysiological and neuroimaging studies using identical materials and task settings have shown differences between adults’ and infants’ NAD learning from passive listening. These studies are outlined in the paragraph

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