Linguistic entrenchment: Prior knowledge impacts statistical learning performance
Date
2018Author
Siegelman, Noam
Bogaerts, Louisa
Elazar, Amit
Arciuli, Joanne
Frost, Ram
Metadata
Show full item record
Noam Siegelman, Louisa Bogaerts, Amit Elazar, Joanne Arciuli, Ram Frost, Linguistic entrenchment: Prior knowledge impacts statistical learning performance, Cognition, Volume 177, 2018, Pages 198-213, ISSN 0010-0277, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2018.04.011.
Abstract
Statistical Learning (SL) is typically considered to be a domain-general mechanism by which cognitive systems discover the underlying statistical regularities in the input. Recent findings, however, show clear differences in processing regularities across modalities and stimuli as well as low correlations between performance on visual and auditory tasks. Why does a presumably domain-general mechanism show distinct patterns of modality and stimulus specificity? Here we claim that the key to this puzzle lies in the prior knowledge brought upon by learners to the learning task. Specifically, we argue that learners’ already entrenched expectations about speech co-occurrences from their native language impacts what they learn from novel auditory verbal input. In contrast, learners are free of such entrenchment when processing sequences of visual material such as abstract shapes. We present evidence from three experiments supporting this hypothesis by showing that auditory-verbal tasks display distinct item-specific effects resulting in low correlations between test items. In contrast, non-verbal tasks – visual and auditory – show high correlations between items. Importantly, we also show that individual performance in visual and auditory SL tasks that do not implicate prior knowledge regarding co-occurrence of elements, is highly correlated. In a fourth experiment, we present further support for the entrenchment hypothesis by showing that the variance in performance between different stimuli in auditory-verbal statistical learning tasks can be traced back to their resemblance to participants' native language. We discuss the methodological and theoretical implications of these findings, focusing on models of domain generality/specificity of SL.