Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience, Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital.
Department of Psychology, University of South Carolina.
Dev Psychol. 2024 Dec;60(12):2306-2320. doi: 10.1037/dev0001800. Epub 2024 Aug 29.
Auditory statistical learning, or the ability to detect statistical regularities in continuously presented stimuli, is thought to be one element that underlies language acquisition. Prior studies have uncovered behavioral and neural correlates of statistical learning, yet additional work is needed from low- and middle-income countries to explore whether statistical learning varies across cultures or underlies associations often found between socioeconomic status (SES) and language outcomes. In the present study, we explored the feasibility of using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to explore auditory statistical learning in Bangladesh, a lower-middle-income country. Participants were 102 2-year-old ( = 25.72 months, = 2.07 months) and 125 5-year-old children ( = 62.35 months, = 2.46 months) living in a low-income urban neighborhood of Dhaka (average family income of 28,145.13 Bangladeshi Takas or 260.06 U.S. dollars per month). We also collected measures of SES and language outcomes. Brain responses during the statistical learning paradigm could be detected with fNIRS in both two- and 5-year-olds, with 2-year-olds exhibiting a higher response to predictable sequences and 5-year-olds exhibiting higher responses to unpredictable sequences. fNIRS correlates of statistical learning were not related to language outcomes but were associated with SES in the 5-year-old cohort. This study demonstrates the utility of employing fNIRS to study the neural correlates of statistical learning in low- and middle-income countries and the feasibility of expanding the representativeness of the existing literature. These findings also highlight potential areas for inquiry into how SES may relate to individual differences in statistical learning responses. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
听觉统计学习,或检测连续呈现刺激中统计规律的能力,被认为是语言习得的基础之一。先前的研究已经揭示了统计学习的行为和神经相关性,但需要来自低收入和中等收入国家的额外工作,以探索统计学习是否在不同文化中存在差异,或者是否是社会经济地位 (SES) 与语言结果之间经常发现的关联的基础。在本研究中,我们探索了使用功能近红外光谱 (fNIRS) 探索孟加拉国(一个中低收入国家)听觉统计学习的可行性。参与者是居住在达卡一个低收入城市社区的 102 名 2 岁( = 25.72 个月, = 2.07 个月)和 125 名 5 岁儿童( = 62.35 个月, = 2.46 个月)。我们还收集了 SES 和语言结果的测量值。在统计学习范式中,fNIRS 可以检测到 2 岁和 5 岁儿童的大脑反应,2 岁儿童对可预测序列的反应较高,而 5 岁儿童对不可预测序列的反应较高。统计学习的 fNIRS 相关性与语言结果无关,但与 5 岁组的 SES 相关。这项研究表明,在低收入和中等收入国家使用 fNIRS 研究统计学习的神经相关性具有实用性,并扩大了现有文献的代表性。这些发现还强调了 SES 如何与统计学习反应的个体差异相关的潜在研究领域。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。