School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75080, USA; Callier Center for Communication Disorders, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75080, USA; Center for Brain Health, The University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX 75235, USA; Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75080, USA.
School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75080, USA; Callier Center for Communication Disorders, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75080, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2024 Jan;237:105760. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2023.105760. Epub 2023 Aug 28.
A growing body of research has demonstrated the association between music and language, particularly between rhythm and grammar skills in children. A compelling piece of evidence for the influence of music on language comes from findings that a brief exposure to regular musical rhythm improved subsequent syntactic language performance in children. Nevertheless, those observations were made on one particular task, i.e., grammaticality judgment, mostly with French-speaking children. Here, we sought to corroborate and extend the rhythmic priming effect with English-speaking children aged 7 to 12 years who underwent two different syntactic tasks on spoken sentences: one involving judgment on morphosyntactic well-formedness (grammaticality judgment) and the other requiring noun-verb relation analysis (sentence comprehension), both following either regular or irregular rhythmic priming. Half of the children were administered synthetic speech stimuli (Experiment 1), and the other half were presented with natural speech (Experiment 2). Across the two experiments, we did not find any rhythmic priming effect; children's performance on both the grammaticality judgment and sentence comprehension tasks was comparable irrespective of the regularity in prior rhythms. These results imply that the positive influence of regular rhythmic priming on syntactic processing may be confined to specific language or age populations, warranting further investigation.
越来越多的研究表明音乐和语言之间存在联系,特别是儿童的节奏和语法技能之间存在联系。音乐对语言影响的一个有力证据来自于这样的发现,即短暂接触有规律的音乐节奏可以提高儿童随后的句法语言表现。然而,这些观察结果是在一个特定的任务中得出的,即语法判断,主要是针对说法语的儿童。在这里,我们试图用 7 到 12 岁的英语为母语的儿童来验证和扩展节奏启动效应,这些儿童接受了两种不同的句法任务:一种涉及对形态句法正确性的判断(语法判断),另一种涉及对名词-动词关系的分析(句子理解),这两种任务都遵循有规律或不规则的节奏启动。一半的儿童接受了合成语音刺激(实验 1),另一半儿童接受了自然语音刺激(实验 2)。在两个实验中,我们都没有发现任何节奏启动效应;儿童在语法判断和句子理解任务上的表现不分彼此,无论之前的节奏是否有规律。这些结果表明,有规律的节奏启动对句法处理的积极影响可能仅限于特定的语言或年龄群体,需要进一步研究。