How do infants start learning object names in a sea of clutter?

Hadar Karmazyn Raz, Drew H Abney, David Crandall, Chen Yu, Linda B Smith
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Abstract

Infants are powerful learners. A large corpus of experimental paradigms demonstrate that infants readily learn distributional cues of name-object co-occurrences. But infants' natural learning environment is cluttered: every heard word has multiple competing referents in view. Here we ask how infants start learning name-object co-occurrences in naturalistic learning environments that are cluttered and where there is much visual ambiguity. The framework presented in this paper integrates a naturalistic behavioral study and an application of a machine learning model. Our behavioral findings suggest that in order to start learning object names, infants and their parents consistently select a set of a few objects to play with during a set amount of time. What emerges is a frequency distribution of a few toys that approximates a Zipfian frequency distribution of objects for learning. We find that a machine learning model trained with a Zipf-like distribution of these object images outperformed the model trained with a uniform distribution. Overall, these findings suggest that to overcome referential ambiguity in clutter, infants may be selecting just a few toys allowing them to learn many distributional cues about a few name-object pairs.

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婴儿是如何在杂乱的海洋中开始学习物体名称的?
婴儿是强大的学习者。大量的实验范式表明,婴儿容易学习名称-对象共现的分布线索。但婴儿的自然学习环境是混乱的:每个听到的单词都有多个相互竞争的参照物。在这里,我们问婴儿是如何开始学习名称-对象共现的自然学习环境中,混乱和有很多视觉模糊性。本文提出的框架集成了自然行为研究和机器学习模型的应用。我们的行为研究结果表明,为了开始学习物体的名称,婴儿和他们的父母在一段固定的时间内不断地选择一组几个物体来玩。出现的是一些玩具的频率分布,它近似于学习对象的Zipfian频率分布。我们发现,使用这些对象图像的zipf分布训练的机器学习模型优于使用均匀分布训练的模型。总的来说,这些发现表明,为了克服混乱中的参照模糊性,婴儿可能只选择了几个玩具,从而使他们能够学习关于几个名称-对象对的许多分布线索。
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