Bannard Colin, Matthews Danielle
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Psychol Sci. 2008 Mar;19(3):241-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02075.x.
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.
最近有关语法发展的观点认为,儿童会记住他们听到的话语,并对这些存储的范例进行归纳总结。本研究通过测试对熟悉单词序列的记忆,验证了这些观点中关于儿童将话语作为整体进行存储的假设。利用一个新可得的、丰富的儿童导向言语语料库,我们识别出输入中频繁出现的语块(例如,sit in your chair),并将它们与不常见的序列(例如,sit in your truck)进行匹配。我们在句子重复测试中检验了幼儿生成这些序列的能力。三岁儿童(n = 21)和两岁儿童(n = 17)正确重复频繁出现序列的可能性显著高于正确重复不常见序列的可能性。此外,如果一个项目的前三个单词构成一个语块的一部分(例如,当后面的单词是chair时,他们更快说出sit in your,而当后面的单词是truck时则不然),三岁儿童重复这三个单词的速度会显著更快。我们讨论了这些结果对语言发展和处理理论的意义。