Trace:
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Next revision | Previous revision | ||
| marcus [2015/11/22 15:16] – created silvia | marcus [2015/11/22 22:55] (current) – silvia | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
| ---- | ---- | ||
| + | **Introduction: | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| One learning mechanism that young infants can exploit is statistical in nature. [...] For example, transitional probabilities - estimates of how likely one item it is to follow another. | One learning mechanism that young infants can exploit is statistical in nature. [...] For example, transitional probabilities - estimates of how likely one item it is to follow another. | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | It has been suggested that mechanisms that track statistical information [...] may suffice for language learning. The alternative possibility considered here is that children might possess at least two learning mechanisms, one for learning statistical information and another one for learning " | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | To date, there has been no direct empirical test for determining whether young infants can actually learn simplified versions of such algebraic rules. | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | ---- | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Conclusions: | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | Our results do not call into question the existence of statistical learning mechanisms, but show that such mechanisms do not exhaust the child' | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | A system that was only sensitive to transitional probabilities between words, could not account for any of these results, because all the words in the test are novel [...] | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | Similarly, a system that noted discrepancies with stored sequences of words could not account for the results [...] because both the consistent and inconsistent items differ from any stored sequences of words. | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | We propose that a system that could account for our results is one in which infants extract abstract algebra-like rules that represent relationships between placeholders (variables), | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | 1. one device that tracks statistical relationships such as transitional probabilities; | ||
| + | \\ | ||
| + | 2. and another one that manipulates variables, allowing children to learn rules. | ||