Language experience changes subsequent learning

► Korean and American adults listened to an artificial grammar with linguistic and non-linguistic stimuli. ► Previous experience with language altered the statistical regularities they attended to. ► Their preferences are consistent with corpus analyses of probabilistic word order tendencies. ► Lear...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognition 2013-02, Vol.126 (2), p.268-284
Hauptverfasser: Onnis, Luca, Thiessen, Erik
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► Korean and American adults listened to an artificial grammar with linguistic and non-linguistic stimuli. ► Previous experience with language altered the statistical regularities they attended to. ► Their preferences are consistent with corpus analyses of probabilistic word order tendencies. ► Learners integrated predictive and retrodictive sensitivities, suggesting the mind is not inherently forward-looking. ► Experience with language may affect cognitive processes and later learning. What are the effects of experience on subsequent learning? We explored the effects of language-specific word order knowledge on the acquisition of sequential conditional information. Korean and English adults were engaged in a sequence learning task involving three different sets of stimuli: auditory linguistic (nonsense syllables), visual non-linguistic (nonsense shapes), and auditory non-linguistic (pure tones). The forward and backward probabilities between adjacent elements generated two equally probable and orthogonal perceptual parses of the elements, such that any significant preference at test must be due to either general cognitive biases, or prior language-induced biases. We found that language modulated parsing preferences with the linguistic stimuli only. Intriguingly, these preferences are congruent with the dominant word order patterns of each language, as corroborated by corpus analyses, and are driven by probabilistic preferences. Furthermore, although the Korean individuals had received extensive formal explicit training in English and lived in an English-speaking environment, they exhibited statistical learning biases congruent with their native language. Our findings suggest that mechanisms of statistical sequential learning are implicated in language across the lifespan, and experience with language may affect cognitive processes and later learning.
ISSN:0010-0277
1873-7838
DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2012.10.008