Exam 3: Learning Sound Patterns
Exam 1: Origins of Human Language50 Questions
Exam 2: Language and the Brain41 Questions
Exam 3: Learning Sound Patterns46 Questions
Exam 4: Learning Words53 Questions
Exam 5: Learning the Structure of Sentences45 Questions
Exam 6: Speech Perception40 Questions
Exam 7: Word Recognition43 Questions
Exam 8: Understanding Sentence Structure and Meaning46 Questions
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Identify and describe the major dimensions of speech sound distinctions.
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Jusczyk and Aslin (1995) found that babies as young as 6 months of age could not segment words in sentences, whereas Bortfeld (2005) found that they could. How would you account for this difference?
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Refer to the figure.
Hauser et al. (2001) conducted an experiment with tamarin monkeys that was very similar to Saffran et al.'s 1996 study investigating transitional probabilities. They found that after listening to a 20-minute stream of words from the same artificial language studied by Saffran et al., the tamarins oriented to a speaker more often when it played sequences of syllables that straddled a word boundary than when it played a sequence of syllables that made up a complete word. Compare this finding to the results reported by Saffran et al. (see Figure 4.2). What do these results suggest about the use of statistical cues for segmenting words?

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Based on the results of Mehler et al.'s 1988 study of language recognition patterns in newborns, you would expect to find that
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In French, nasalization of vowels indicates _______, whereas in English, the same vowel nasalization indicates _______.
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Saffran and Thiessen's 2003 study on pattern induction by infant language learners helped demonstrate that
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Which word would be easiest for 7.5-month-old babies of English-speaking parents to segment out of fluid speech? (Stress indicated by capital letters.)
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Describe what a backward transitional probability (TP) is and provide an example. Explain how an infant might use this information to decide if the word baby is a noun.
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In Jusczyk and Aslin's 1995 study, 7.5 month old babies could
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A fricative, labiodental, and voiced sound would most likely be made by a
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Design a simple experiment that could demonstrate the phonemic restoration effect.
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Based on White et al.'s 2008 study, you would predict that the 8.5-month-old baby of English-speaking parents would
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Refer to the figure.
Based on the results in the table, what can you conclude about the ability of an 8-month-old to detect words presented to him during the familiarization phase?

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Dupoux et al.'s 1999 research showed that native speakers of a certain language insert illusory sounds to change syllable sequences that are "illegal" in their language to a legal sequence. These findings illustrate the power of
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According to Saffran et al. (1996), which of the following is true?
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Based on the findings of Saffran et al. (1996), an 8-month-old infant would be capable of segmenting language sounds presented in a continuous stream, without intonation to represent word breaks,
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