Cognitive and Neural Mechanisms Sustaining Rule Learning from Speech

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De Diego Balaguer, Ruth
López-Barroso, Diana

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Wiley

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Learners of a newlanguage have to extractwords and the rules from speech. Learners are endowedwith the capacity to extract statistical regularities from their environment allowing them to extract words from continuous speech in the absence of other cues. However, it has been proposed that natural languages have an intrinsic cue: prosodic information. This cue seems to trigger the application of different computational resources that allows the extraction of rules. This review summarizes work indicating that attention and working memory are critical in the early stages of language acquisition, in the absence of semantic information. Event-related potentials while participants learned artificial languages with embedded morphological rules show a dissociation between the brain responses associated toword and rule learning. The results indicate that salient cues such as prosody help to direct attention biasing perception to ignore irrelevant information and attend to the relevant segments containing the rule, shifting from word acquisition to rule extraction. Finally, data from individual differences in brain connectivity related to phonological working memory and data from brain-lesioned patients point to the basal ganglia as a coordinator structure among language, working memory, and attention through its rich connections with brain areas responsible for these functions.

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De Diego‐Balaguer, R., & Lopez‐Barroso, D. (2010). Cognitive and neural mechanisms sustaining rule learning from speech. Language Learning, 60, 151-187.

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional