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Sensitivity to discontinuous dependencies in language learners: evidence for limitations in processing space

Five experiments using the Headturn Preference Procedure examined 15- and 18-month-old children's sensitivity to morphosyntactic dependencies in English. In each experiment, the children were exposed to two types of passages. Passages in the experimental condition contained a well-formed Englis...

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Published in:Cognition 1998-12, Vol.69 (2), p.105-134
Main Authors: Santelmann, Lynn M, Jusczyk, Peter W
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Language:English
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description Five experiments using the Headturn Preference Procedure examined 15- and 18-month-old children's sensitivity to morphosyntactic dependencies in English. In each experiment, the children were exposed to two types of passages. Passages in the experimental condition contained a well-formed English dependency between the auxiliary verb is and a main verb with the ending -ing. Passages in the control condition contained an ungrammatical combination of the modal auxiliary can and a main verb with the ending -ing. In the experiments, the distance between the dependent morphemes was systematically varied by inserting an adverbial of a specified length between the auxiliary and main verbs. The results indicated that 18-month-olds are sensitive to the basic relationship between is and -ing, but that 15-month-olds are not. The 18-month-olds, but not the 15-month-olds, listened significantly longer to the passages with the well-formed English dependency. In addition, the 18-month-olds showed this preference for the well-formed dependency only over a limited domain of 1–3 syllables. Over domains of 4–5 syllables, they showed no significant preference for the experimental over the control passages. These findings indicate that 18-month-olds can track relationships between functor morphemes. Additionally, these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that 18-month-olds are working with a limited processing window, and that they are only picking up relevant dependencies that fall within this window.
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source Elsevier; ERIC; Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
subjects Age Differences
Attention
Child language. Acquisition and development
Cognitive Development
English
Female
Headturn preference procedure
Humans
Infant
Infant Behavior
Infants
Information Processing
Language Development
Linguistics
Male
Morphemes
Morphosyntactic dependencies
Phonetics
Production and comprehension processes
Psycholinguistics
Psychology of language
Semantics
Speech Perception
Syntax
title Sensitivity to discontinuous dependencies in language learners: evidence for limitations in processing space
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