Abstract

We investigated the effects of word order and prosody on word learning in school-age children. Third graders viewed photographs belonging to one of three semantic categories while hearing four-word nonsense utterances containing a target word. In the control condition, all words had the same pitch and, across trials, the position of the target word was varied systematically within each utterance. The only cue to word–meaning mapping was the co-occurrence of target words and referents. This cue was present in all conditions. In the Utterance-final condition, the target word always occurred in utterance-final position, and at the same fundamental frequency as all the other words of the utterance. In the Pitch peak condition, the position of the target word was varied systematically within each utterance across trials, and produced with pitch contrasts typical of infant-directed speech (IDS). In the Pitch peak + Utterance-final condition, the target word always occurred in utterance-final position, and was marked with a pitch contrast typical of IDS. Word learning occurred in all conditions except the control condition. Moreover, learning performance was significantly higher than that observed with simple co-occurrence (control condition) only for the Pitch peak + Utterance-final condition. We conclude that, for school-age children, the combination of words' utterance-final alignment and pitch enhancement boosts word learning.

Highlights

  • A central issue in the study of language acquisition concerns the perceptual and memory constraints that human learners are subjected to as anchor points for word learning [1,2]

  • A binomial test revealed that participants performed significantly better than chance (33.3%) in all conditions (Utterance-final and Pitch peak: p < 0.01, one-tailed; Pitch peak + Utterance-final condition: p < 0.001, one-tailed) except the control condition (p = 0.344, one-tailed)

  • This 9 study was designed to determine the effect of words’ pitch contrasts of infant-directed speech (IDS) and Utterance-final position in facilitating word learning in school-age children, who are still very actively acquiring new vocabulary

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Summary

Introduction

A central issue in the study of language acquisition concerns the perceptual and memory constraints that human learners are subjected to as anchor points for word learning [1,2]. A learner who is faced with multiple potential referents for a novel word on any single learning scene might store possible word–referent pairings across trials, i.e. evaluate the statistically regular co-occurrences between words and referents, and map individual words to their referents through this cross-trial evidence [8]. This kind of learning is shown to be sufficiently rapid and robust [6]. A final step in this process includes extending the acquired word over a potentially infinite set of appropriate referents within the same semantic category, for instance using the word ‘dog’ for dogs that the given learner has never seen before [5,14], and to an open-ended set of novel utterances [15]

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