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Research article summary (published 28 Feb 2008):

Stored word sequences in language learning: the effect of familiarity on children's repetition of four-word combinations.

Full Abstract

Recent accounts of the development of grammar propose that children remember utterances they hear and draw generalizations over these stored exemplars. This study tested these accounts' assumption that children store utterances as wholes by testing memory for familiar sequences of words. Using a newly available, dense corpus of child-directed speech, we identified frequently occurring chunks in the input (e.g., sit in your chair) and matched them to infrequent sequences (e.g., sit in your truck). We tested young children's ability to produce these sequences in a sentence-repetition test. Three-year-olds (n= 21) and 2-year-olds (n= 17) were significantly more likely to repeat frequent sequences correctly than to repeat infrequent sequences correctly. Moreover, the 3-year-olds were significantly faster to repeat the first three words of an item if they formed part of a chunk (e.g., they were quicker to say sit in your when the following word was chair than when it was truck). We discuss the implications of these results for theories of language development and processing.

 

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Author information

Author/s: Bannard, Colin (C); Matthews, Danielle (D);

Affiliation: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany. bannard(-atsign-)eva.mpg.de

Journal and publication information

Publication Type: Journal Article

Journal: Psychological science : a journal of the American Psychological Society / APS (Psychol Sci), published in United States. (Language: eng)

Reference: 2008-Mar; vol 19 (issue 3) : pp 241-8

Dates: Created 2008/03/04; Completed 2008/04/30;

PMID: 18315796, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 11/6/2008)

Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.

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