Willits Jon A, Seidenberg Mark S, Saffran Jenny R
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, 1101 E. 10th St., Bloomington, IN 47405, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin, 1202 W. Johnson Street, Madison, WI 53706, United States.
Cognition. 2014 Sep;132(3):429-36. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2014.05.004. Epub 2014 Jun 6.
What makes some words easy for infants to recognize, and other words difficult? We addressed this issue in the context of prior results suggesting that infants have difficulty recognizing verbs relative to nouns. In this work, we highlight the role played by the distributional contexts in which nouns and verbs occur. Distributional statistics predict that English nouns should generally be easier to recognize than verbs in fluent speech. However, there are situations in which distributional statistics provide similar support for verbs. The statistics for verbs that occur with the English morpheme -ing, for example, should facilitate verb recognition. In two experiments with 7.5- and 9.5-month-old infants, we tested the importance of distributional statistics for word recognition by varying the frequency of the contextual frames in which verbs occur. The results support the conclusion that distributional statistics are utilized by infant language learners and contribute to noun-verb differences in word recognition.
是什么使得一些单词对婴儿来说容易识别,而另一些单词却很难呢?我们在先前结果的背景下探讨了这个问题,先前结果表明婴儿在识别动词方面相对于名词存在困难。在这项研究中,我们强调了名词和动词出现的分布语境所起的作用。分布统计预测,在流利的语言中,英语名词通常比动词更容易识别。然而,在某些情况下,分布统计对动词也提供了类似的支持。例如,与英语词素-ing一起出现的动词的统计数据应该有助于动词识别。在针对7.5个月和9.5个月大婴儿的两项实验中,我们通过改变动词出现的语境框架的频率,测试了分布统计对单词识别的重要性。结果支持了这样的结论,即婴儿语言学习者会利用分布统计,并且这有助于单词识别中名词和动词的差异。