Abstract

In order to acquire their native languages, children must learn richly structured systems with regularities at multiple levels. While structure at different levels could be learned serially, e.g., speech segmentation coming before word-object mapping, redundancies across levels make parallel learning more efficient. For instance, a series of syllables is likely to be a word not only because of high transitional probabilities, but also because of a consistently co-occurring object. But additional statistics require additional processing, and thus might not be useful to cognitively constrained learners. We show that the structure of child-directed speech makes simultaneous speech segmentation and word learning tractable for human learners. First, a corpus of child-directed speech was recorded from parents and children engaged in a naturalistic free-play task. Analyses revealed two consistent regularities in the sentence structure of naming events. These regularities were subsequently encoded in an artificial language to which adult participants were exposed in the context of simultaneous statistical speech segmentation and word learning. Either regularity was independently sufficient to support successful learning, but no learning occurred in the absence of both regularities. Thus, the structure of child-directed speech plays an important role in scaffolding speech segmentation and word learning in parallel.

Highlights

  • Human language is richly structured, with important regularities to be learned at multiple levels (Kuhl, 2004)

  • Because the Experiments investigate the role of naming frames in parallel speech segmentation and word learning, these utterances were excluded from further analysis, but we return to them in the Discussion

  • Evidence from other studies suggests that redundant cues help children learn language (e.g., Gogate et al, 2000; Frank et al, 2009). The combination of both position and onset cues could play an additive role in speech segmentation and word learning

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Summary

Introduction

Human language is richly structured, with important regularities to be learned at multiple levels (Kuhl, 2004). Only a tiny fraction of these become meaningful units – phonemes – within a particular language. These phonemes can be strung together into an infinite number of sequences, but only a tiny fraction of these are words. Infants must solve the problem of parsing a continuous sequence of phonemes into word units. Some of these words refer to objects in the visual world, and so, for these segmented words, infants must solve the word-world mapping problem. Speakers may refer to the same object with different words in different contexts, and different word orderings and stress patterns can radically alter an utterance’s meanings, so children must organize sounds, segments, and meanings at the levels pragmatics, syntax, and prosody as well

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