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Robustness of the rule-learning effect in 7-month-old infants: A close, multicenter replication of Marcus et al. (1999)

Authors :
Geambasu, Andreea
Spit, Sybren
van Renswoude, Daan
Blom, Elma
Junge, Caroline
Fikkert, Paula
Hunnius, Sabine
Verhagen, Josje
Visser, Ingmar
Wijnen, Frank
Levelt, Clara C
Leerstoel Blom
Education and Learning: Cognitive and Motor Disabilities
Leerstoel Kemner
Helmholtz Institute
Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF)
LS Psycholinguistiek
ILS LAPD
ACLC (FGw)
Ontwikkelingspsychologie (Psychologie, FMG)
Leerstoel Blom
Education and Learning: Cognitive and Motor Disabilities
Leerstoel Kemner
Helmholtz Institute
Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF)
LS Psycholinguistiek
ILS LAPD
Source :
Developmental Science, 26(1):e13244. Wiley-Blackwell, Developmental Science, 26(1), 1. Wiley-Blackwell, Developmental Science, 26, 1, Developmental Science, 26, Developmental Science, 26(1). Wiley
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 246903.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) We conducted a close replication of the seminal work by Marcus et al. (1999), which showed that after a brief auditory exposure phase, seven-month-old infants were able to learn and generalize a rule to novel syllables not previously present in the exposure phase. This work became the foundation for the theoretical framework by which we assume that infants are able to learn abstract representations and generalize linguistic rules. While some extensions on the original work have shown evidence of rule learning, the outcomes are mixed, and an exact replication of Marcus et al.'s study has thus far not been reported. A recent meta-analysis (Rabagliati et al., 2019) brings to light that the rule-learning effect depends on stimulus type (e.g., meaningfulness, speech versus nonspeech) and is not as robust as often assumed. In light of the theoretical importance of the issue at stake, it is appropriate and necessary to assess the replicability and robustness of Marcus et al.'s findings. Here we have undertaken a replication across four labs with a large sample of seven-month-old infants (N = 96), using the same exposure patterns (ABA and ABB), methodology (Headturn Preference Paradigm), and original stimuli. As in the original study, we tested the hypothesis that infants are able to learn abstract "algebraic" rules and apply them to novel input. Our results did not replicate the original findings: infants showed no difference in looking time between test patterns consistent or inconsistent with the familiarization pattern they were exposed to. 12 p.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1363755X
Volume :
26
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10a9f71cc556cd164c679fee81e41e06