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Artificial language rule learning in school children

Abstract

The study investigated the utilization of rule learning to acquire non-adjacent dependencies in artificial languages, and the relationship between rule learning ability and Cantonese grammar ability, in Cantonese-speaking school children in Hong Kong. Fifty-nine children, aged 9;00 to 13;00 (mean age 10;04), in P4 to P5 were recruited from two primary schools and a local educational centre. The participants’ performance in rule learning test and their receptive and expressive Cantonese grammar ability were measured. The results showed a marginal significance in the children’s ability to differentiate the correctness of dependencies. This suggested the school children could abstract non-adjacent dependency rules in artificial languages which simulated Cantonese. Meanwhile, the results revealed no correlation between rule learning ability and Cantonese grammar ability. It was hypothesized that the above findings were resulted from inadequate exposure to the artificial languages in the experiment, thus longer and repeated exposure might yield better discrimination of rules as well as more salient correlation between rule learning ability and Cantonese grammar ability. This hypothesis and the school children’s ability to learn non-adjacent dependencies via rule learning were discussed.published_or_final_versionSpeech and Hearing SciencesBachelorBachelor of Science in Speech and Hearing Science

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