统计学习在整个发展过程中的变化

IF 16.8 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Tess Allegra Forest, Margaret L. Schlichting, Katherine D. Duncan, Amy S. Finn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

统计学习使学习者能够提取必要的环境规律性,从而拼凑出自己世界的结构。从婴儿期到成年期,统计学习的能力及其特性可能会发生变化。承认这种发展变化对于理解统计学习的认知结构以及为什么儿童在某些学习情境中比成人更出色具有广泛的意义。在这篇综述中,我们首先综合了有关统计学习发展的实证研究,这些研究表明,只有在某些形式的输入中,统计学习才会随着发展而得到改善。然后,我们从相关的认知和神经研究结果中汲取灵感,考虑统计学习特性的发展变化。婴幼儿的学习课程可能更宽泛,指向性更弱,他们对学习结果的表征也与年长儿童和成人不同。通过这一综合分析,我们可以深入了解,从婴儿期到成年期,统计学习的发展变化可能会从根本上改变儿童与经验的互动、学习和记忆方式。从婴儿期开始,人类就通过统计学习来了解世界的规律性。在这篇综述中,Forest 等人考虑了统计学习如何在整个发展过程中发生量变和质变,同时考虑了对学习输入和由此产生的记忆表征的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Changes in statistical learning across development

Changes in statistical learning across development
Statistical learning enables learners to extract the environmental regularities necessary to piece together the structure of their worlds. The capacity for statistical learning and its properties are likely to change across development from infancy to adulthood. Acknowledging this developmental change has broad implications for understanding the cognitive architecture of statistical learning and why children excel in certain learning situations relative to adults. In this Review, we first synthesize empirical work on the development of statistical learning, which indicates that it improves with development only for certain forms of input. Taking inspiration from related cognitive and neural findings, we then consider developmental changes in the properties of statistical learning. Infants and young children might have a broader and less-directed curriculum for learning and represent the outcomes of learning differently from older children and adults. This synthesis offers insight into how developmental changes in statistical learning from infancy through adulthood might fundamentally alter how children interact with, learn about, and remember their experiences. From infancy, humans learn the regularities of their world using statistical learning. In this Review, Forest et al. consider how statistical learning changes quantitatively and qualitatively across development, considering influences on the input to learning and the resulting memory representations.
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CiteScore
9.30
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