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First published March 2007

Can Infants Map Meaning to Newly Segmented Words?: Statistical Segmentation and Word Learning

Abstract

The present experiments investigated how the process of statistically segmenting words from fluent speech is linked to the process of mapping meanings to words. Seventeen-month-old infants first participated in a statistical word segmentation task, which was immediately followed by an object-label-learning task. Infants presented with labels that were words in the fluent speech used in the segmentation task were able to learn the object labels. However, infants presented with labels consisting of novel syllable sequences (nonwords; Experiment 1) or familiar sequences with low internal probabilities (part-words; Experiment 2) did not learn the labels. Thus, prior segmentation opportunities, but not mere frequency of exposure, facilitated infants∗ learning of object labels. This work provides the first demonstration that exposure to word forms in a statistical word segmentation task facilitates subsequent word learning.

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Article first published: March 2007
Issue published: March 2007

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© 2007 Association for Psychological Science.
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PubMed: 17444923

Authors

Affiliations

Katharine Graf Estes
Julia L. Evans
San Diego State University
Martha W. Alibali
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jenny R. Saffran
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Notes

Katharine Graf Estes, Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1500 Highland Ave., Room 501, Madison, WI 53705, e-mail: [email protected].

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