A-2

L. Falkenstein, S. Stapleford, Molly Kao
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Infants are able to extract words from speech early in life. Here we show that the quality of forming longer-term representations for word forms at birth predicts expressive language ability at the age of two years. Seventy-five neonates were familiarized with two spoken disyllabic pseudowords. We then tested whether the neonate brain predicts the second syllable from the first one by presenting a familiarized pseudoword frequently, and occasionally violating the learned syllable combination by different rare pseudowords. Distinct brain responses were elicited by predicted and unpredicted word endings, suggesting that the neonates had learned the familiarized pseudowords. The difference between responses to predicted and unpredicted pseudowords indexing the quality of word-form learning during familiarization significantly correlated with expressive language scores (the mean length of utterance) at 24 months in the same infant. These findings suggest that 1) neonates can memorize disyllabic words so that a learned first syllable generates predictions for the word ending, and 2) early individual differences in the quality of word-form learning correlate with language skills. This relationship helps early identification of infants at risk for language impairment.
a -
婴儿在很小的时候就能从言语中提取单词。在这里,我们展示了出生时形成单词形式的长期表征的质量可以预测两岁时的表达语言能力。75名新生儿熟悉两个双音节假词。然后,我们测试了新生儿的大脑是否通过频繁地呈现一个熟悉的假词来预测第一个音节的第二个音节,偶尔用不同的罕见假词来违背所学的音节组合。预测和未预测的单词结尾会引起不同的大脑反应,这表明新生儿已经学会了熟悉的假词。同一婴儿在24月龄时对预测和非预测假词的反应差异与表达性语言分数(平均话语长度)显著相关。这些发现表明,1)新生儿可以记忆双音节单词,因此,学会的第一个音节可以预测单词的结尾;2)早期个体在词形学习质量上的差异与语言技能有关。这种关系有助于早期识别有语言障碍风险的婴儿。
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