All human learners with normal cognitive capacities who are exposed to language input in childhood manage to acquire a language that looks very much like their input. However, at present we have little idea how, exactly, learners accomplish this feat. We have little understanding of the nature of the learning mechanisms that underlie and support language learning. This is the focus of the research in this proposal. Three general questions guide the research. (1) What are the constraints on language learning mechanisms? (2) Are the learning mechanisms involved in language acquisition specific to language or are they of a more general nature? (3) Do these mechanisms change over time as learners age, and if 'so, how? The proposed research examines these questions by investigating the learning of probabilistic and inconsistent patterns in the input using miniature artificial languages. This provides a rather unique view of the constraints on learning mechanisms, examining the limits of what can and cannot be learned. Previous work has shown that learners can acquire probabilistic patterns, however they sometimes impose consistency on variation. Moreover, children are more likely to change such patterns than are adults. The present research expands on the earlier results, asking about the nature of the interaction between learners and input. Series 1 asks about the nature of the input that makes some inconstancy learnable and some not. The studies examine the limits of veridical learning of inconsistent patterns in languages, asking questions about the specificity of computations learners can perform, the representations over which such computations can be performed, and the effect of prior domain-specific knowledge. Series 2 asks about the nature of the learner, asking why learners regularize over inconsistency at all. In particular, the studies examine whether working memory constraints, rather than constraints stemming directly from the learning mechanisms themselves, are an important factor influencing whether learners acquire the variation or instead impose regularity. Both series will be conducted with adults and children to examine how learning changes over development. Although the input in the proposed studies is somewhat atypical, the results from these studies will contribute to our understanding of the learning mechanisms involved in language acquisition more generally, and ultimately, this increases our understanding of both normal and disordered acquisition. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD048572-02
Application #
7212176
Study Section
Language and Communication Study Section (LCOM)
Program Officer
Mccardle, Peggy D
Project Start
2006-04-01
Project End
2010-01-31
Budget Start
2007-02-01
Budget End
2008-01-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$186,741
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Berkeley
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
124726725
City
Berkeley
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94704
Finn, Amy S; Hudson Kam, Carla L (2015) Why segmentation matters: Experience-driven segmentation errors impair ""morpheme"" learning. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 41:1560-9
Goodrich Smith, Whitney; Hudson Kam, Carla L (2015) Children's use of gesture in ambiguous pronoun interpretation. J Child Lang 42:591-617
Finn, Amy S; Hudson Kam, Carla L; Ettlinger, Marc et al. (2013) Learning language with the wrong neural scaffolding: the cost of neural commitment to sounds. Front Syst Neurosci 7:85
Hudson Kam, Carla L; Smith, Whitney Goodrich (2011) The problem of conventionality in the development of creole morphological systems. Can J Linguist 56:109-124
Kam, Carla L Hudson; Newport, Elissa L (2009) Getting it right by getting it wrong: when learners change languages. Cogn Psychol 59:30-66
Hudson Kam, Carla L; Chang, Ann (2009) Investigating the cause of language regularization in adults: memory constraints or learning effects? J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 35:815-21
Hudson Kam, Carla L (2009) More than words: Adults learn probabilities over categories and relationships between them. Lang Learn Dev 5:115-145