Abstract

High frequency words have been suggested to benefit both speech segmentation and grammatical categorization of the words around them. Despite utilizing similar information, these tasks are usually investigated separately in studies examining learning. We determined whether including high frequency words in continuous speech could support categorization when words are being segmented for the first time. We familiarized learners with continuous artificial speech comprising repetitions of target words, which were preceded by high-frequency marker words. Crucially, marker words distinguished targets into 2 distributionally defined categories. We measured learning with segmentation and categorization tests and compared performance against a control group that heard the artificial speech without these marker words (i.e., just the targets, with no cues for categorization). Participants segmented the target words from speech in both conditions, but critically when the marker words were present, they influenced acquisition of word-referent mappings in a subsequent transfer task, with participants demonstrating better early learning for mappings that were consistent (rather than inconsistent) with the distributional categories. We propose that high-frequency words may assist early grammatical categorization, while speech segmentation is still being learned.

Highlights

  • High frequency words have been suggested to benefit both speech segmentation and grammatical categorization of the words around them

  • We examine the possibility that the same distributional cue can assist multiple tasks in language learning at the same time; statistical speech segmentation, and categorization of the segmented items

  • Bringing together the literature on high frequency words, statistical speech segmentation, and grammatical categorization, the present study examined whether the same high-frequency marker words could influence statistical speech segmentation and grammatical categorization simultaneously

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Summary

Participants

Participants were 48 adults (16 males, 32 females), all students at Lancaster University, with a mean age of 19.10 years (range ϭ 18 –22 years). All participants were native-English-speakers, with no known history of auditory, speech, or language disorder. Participants were paid £3.50 or received course credit

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