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Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities


Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities

These results suggest that 9-month-olds seem unable to learn the nonadjacent dependency rule in the absence of acoustic cues.

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities

In language, grammatical dependencies often hold between items that are not immediately adjacent to each other. Acquiring these nonadjacent ...

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to non-adjacent regularities.

Prosodic cues are both present, helping the infant brain detect the building blocks that form a nonadjacent dependency.

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities

In language, grammatical dependencies often hold between items that are not immediately adjacent to each other. Acquiring these nonadjacent dependencies is ...

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities

How does the infant brain solve this computational learning problem? Here, we demonstrate that while rudimentary sensitivity to nonadjacent ...

Brainvitge Research Lines Language development

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to non-adjacent regularities. Science advances. 9(15):eade4083. Cognition and Brain Plasticity Group. C/ Feixa ...

Speech rhythm and pitch are fundamental in babies' language ...

More information: Anna Martinez-Alvarez et al, Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities, Science Advances (2023).

Research. At nine months, babies learn grammar from 'the music of ...

A recent study entitled Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities shows that children are able to learn these ...

Supplementary Materials for - Europe PMC

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities. Anna Martinez-Alvarez et al. Corresponding author: Ruth de Diego-Balaguer, ruth ...

Ruth de Diego-Balaguer on X: "https://t.co/cfkshKbqYf" / X

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities. Neural foundations of rule learning in infancy pave the way for ...

juditgervain - Publications - Google Sites

2023. “Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to non-adjacent regularities”. Science Advances. Gemignani, J.

Non-adjacent dependency learning in infancy, and its link to ...

... infants' sensitivity to morphosyntactic regularities. Journal of Child ... Learnability of embedded syntactic structures depends on prosodic cues.

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Research Article. Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities. Anna Martinez-Alvarez et al. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ade4083. Your name.

Publications – APAL

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities. Science Advances, 9(15), eade4083. Ramon-Casas, M., Cortés, S., Benet, A., Lleó, C ...

Infant wearing a fNIRS cap allowing to measure changes in the ...

When exposed to flat speech lacking prosodic cues, infants didn't exhibit ... 'Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities.

Learning at a distance I. Statistical learning of non-adjacent ...

Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to nonadjacent regularities. Article. Full-text available. Apr 2023. Judit Gervain ...

The prosodic bootstrapping of phrases: Evidence from prelinguistic ...

In a first effort to evaluate infants' sensitivity to the prosodic cues that correlate with phrase boundaries,. Jusczyk et al. (1992) employed the pause- ...

Six-month-old infants' perception of structural regularities in speech

Infant sensitivity to distributional information can affect phonetic discrimination ... Prosodic cues enhance infants' sensitivity to non-adjacent regularities.

When prosody fails to cue syntactic structure - Psychology

Second, young language learners demonstrate remarkable sensitivity to prosodic regularities in their native language. In speech perception studies, infants ...

Infants Use Prosodic Cues to Recognize Language

In their study, the team distinguished between two types of vocalizations in babies: cry and non-cry vocalizations in technical language. Or, to put it another ...