Background Adults and infants appear to be able to quickly learn statistical properties of language input (Saffran, et al.,1997; Saffran, 1996; Maye, Werker,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CDC Growth Charts 2000 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Advertisements

WMS-IV Wechsler Memory Scale - Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2014 by McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.
Lecture 2 ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE: AN INTRODUCTION
1 The Social Survey ICBS Nurit Dobrin December 2010.
Aging and Intelligence
Achievement Tests Designed to measure the skills and abilities acquired through direct instruction or intervention. Can measure both lower order and high.
Unit 8: Presenting Data in Charts, Graphs and Tables
Progress Monitoring. Progress Monitoring Steps  Monitor the intervention’s progress as directed by individual student’s RtI plan  Establish a baseline.
J. Dahm 1, J. Ponsford 1,2, D. Wong 1,3, M.Schönberger 1,2 1 Monash University, 2 Monash-Epworth Rehabilitation Research Centre, 3 Epworth Hospital Introduction.
Introduction  Children with Attention-deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are at risk for academic delays. At least one-third repeat an elementary grade,
Stereotype threat is defined as the experience of anxiety when faced with a confirmable stereotype (Steele & Aronson, 1995). Often anxiety obstructs cognitive.
Intelligence Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D. 1. Intelligence Why do we want to measure intelligence? What are some of the reasons we measure intelligence?
1 Using K-12 Assessment Data from Teacher Work Samples as Credible Evidence of a Teacher Candidate’s Ability to Produce Student Learning Presented by Roger.
> Main questions of the study: (1)Are there global differences in reading speed and accuracy between dyslexics and controls across.
Commonly Used Distributions
WestEd.org Infant/Toddler Language Development Language Development and Older Infants.
Associations of behavioral parameters of speech emotional prosody perception with EI measures in adult listeners Elena Dmitrieva Kira Zaitseva, Alexandr.
Measuring Referring Expressions in a Story Context Phyllis Schneider, Speech Pathology & Audiology, University of Alberta Denyse Hayward, University of.
Aimee L. Arnoldussen; Julia L. Evans; Mark S. Seidenberg Performance Matching: Comparing Children with Specific Language Impairment to Younger Children.
Neuropathology and Cognitive Scores Workgroup The role of vascular and Alzheimer’s Disease pathology in differential cognitive impairment among older adults.
Children challenged by writing: The handwriting execution speed of children with specific language impairment (SLI) Vince Connelly, Julie Dockrell Sarah.
Comparison of Spatial and Temporal Discrimination Performance across Various Difficulty Levels J.E. THROPP, J.L. SZALMA, & P.A. HANCOCK Department of Psychology.
 The results of Experiment 2 replicated those of Experiment 1. Error rates were comparable for younger adults (2.4%) and older adults (2.1%).  Again,
The Nature of Learner Language
Abstract Cognitive control processes reduce the effects of irrelevant or misleading information on performance. We report a study suggesting that effective.
Chapter 4 Mental Retardation Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Effects of Increased Cognitive Demands on the Written Discourse Ability of Young Adolescents Ashleigh Elaine Zumwalt Eastern Illinois University.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 13 – Individual Differences in Cognition June 6, 2003.
Effects of Bilingualism on Hemispheric Interaction Suzanne E. Welcome & Christine Chiarello University of California, Riverside Maintaining and coordinating.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 13 – Individual Differences in Cognition August 28, 2003.
Wilson, “The case for sensorimotor coding in working memory” Wilson’s thesis: Items held in short-term verbal memory are encoded in an “articulatory” format.
Discrimination-Shift Problems Background This type of task has been used to compare concept learning across species as well as across a broad range of.
Chapter 2: Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development Jean Piaget ( )
Review of three tests of children’s narrative ability [Poster presented at Narratives, Intervention, and Literacy conference, Paris, France, Sept. 2012]
Communication Disorders
Step Up To: Psychology by John J. Schulte, Psy.D. Psychology, Eighth Edition By David G. Myers Worth Publishers (2007)
Second Language acquisition
Chapter 10 THE NATURE OF WORK GROUPS AND TEAMS. CHAPTER 10 The Nature of Work Groups and Teams Copyright © 2002 Prentice-Hall What is a Group? A set of.
Many children with speech-language impairment will have difficulty with reading. Even those children who begin kindergarten with adequate early literacy.
SLD Academy 2.0 Houston Independent School District.
Methods Inhibition of Return was used as a marker of attention capture.  After attention goes to a location it is inhibited from returning later. Results.
Association Learning and Recognition Memory in Alcoholic Korsakoff Patients Marlene Oscar-Berman and Joan L. Pulaski Neuropsychology, Volume 11, Issue.
Ryoichi J. P. Noguchi, M.S., Michael M. Knepp, M.S., & Thomas H. Ollendick, Ph.D. INTRODUCTION METHOD  Studies of attention and memory have consistently.
Early Arbitrary Object Memory May Set the Stage for Episodic Memory in Toddlers Frances Balcomb, Nora S. Newcombe, Katrina Ferrara, Jule Grant, Sarah M.
Cognitive Information Processing Dr. K. A. Korb University of Jos.
Theories of First Language Acquisition
Control of Attention in schizophrenia 1.Advance understanding of schizophrenia. Move from description of deficits to explanation of specific mechanisms.
Step Up To: Psychology PERCEPTION Psychology, Eighth Edition By David G. Myers.
Mixed models. Concepts We are often interested in attributing the variability that is evident in data to the various categories, or classifications, of.
1 Cross-language evidence for three factors in speech perception Sandra Anacleto uOttawa.
Examining Constraints on Speech Growth in Children with Cochlear Implants J. Bruce Tomblin The University of Iowa.
CHAPTER 8 DEVELOPMENTAL CHANGES IN READING COMPREHENSION: IMPLICATIONS FOR ASSESSMENT AND INSTRUCTION AUTHORS: SUZANNE M. ADLOF, CHARLES A. PERFETTI, AND.
 Serial Reaction Time Learning in Preschool- and School-Age Children Thomas and Nelson, 2001.
Aimee L. Arnoldussen 1 ; Julia L. Evans 2 ; Mark S. Seidenberg 1,3 Neuroscience Training Program 1 ; Department of Communicative Disorders 2 ; Department.
Differential Ability Scales (DAS-II)
Motion Perception Deficits and Reading Impairment It’s the noise, not the motion A. Sperling, Z-L. Lu, F. Manis & M. Seidenberg.
PET Count  Word Frequency effects (coefficients) were reliably related to activation in both the striate and ITG for older adults only.  For older adults,
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 14 – Individual Differences in Cognition.
Processing Faces with Emotional Expressions: Negative Faces Cause Greater Stroop Interference for Young and Older Adults Gabrielle Osborne 1, Deborah Burke.
Responsiveness of Students With Language Difficulties to Early Intervention in Reading O’Conner, R.E., Bocian, K., Beebe-Frankenberger, M., Linklater,
Introduction Individuals with ASD show inhibitory control deficits that may be associated with the disabling repetitive behaviors characterizing this disorder.
¿What's The Best Way To Teach Children To Read? According To The National Reading Panel.
Research on the relationship between childhood sleep problems and substance use in adolescents and young adults is limited. This knowledge gap has been.
Bowden, Shores, & Mathias (2006): Failure to Replicate or Just Failure to Notice. Does Effort Still Account for More Variance in Neuropsychological Test.
Evidence of Inhibitory Processing During Visual Search
Brain Mechanisms in Early Language Acquisition
Intact Memory for Irrelevant Information Impairs Perception in Amnesia
Intact Memory for Irrelevant Information Impairs Perception in Amnesia
Wallis, JD Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute UC, Berkeley
Presentation transcript:

Background Adults and infants appear to be able to quickly learn statistical properties of language input (Saffran, et al.,1997; Saffran, 1996; Maye, Werker, & Gerken, 2002). Statistical properties of language have been shown to be potentially useful in providing infants with early information for segmentation of phonemes and words. Statistical learning has also been shown to potentially useful for the more difficult nonadjacent relations necessary for syntax (Gómez, 2002; Newport & Aslin, 2004) Statistical learning has been proposed as a basic biological trait that enables language learning (Christiansen & Ellefson, 2002; Tomesello, 2003). Implicit Learning in Adolescents with and without Specific Language Impairment J. Bruce Tomblin and Xuyang Zhang The University of Iowa, Iowa City Discussion This study asked whether the statistical learning rates of children with poor language skills as represented in adolescents with SLI was slower than in normal language age mates. Statistical learning was implemented using a serial response task that requires speeded manual responses. The presence of a predictable sequence resulted in systematically faster responses for all participants. Language status was associated with generally slower responses and with differential rate of learning as reflected in a significant quadratic component being associated with better language. Thus, children with better language learn the statistical dependencies of the sequences more quickly than the children with poorer language skill. Figure 2 shows the characteristics of learning by plotting the growth parameters for children with low language and those with high language abilities. The high language skill children improve quickly and then appear to reach an asymptote. The low language skill children progress more regularly across trials. The results suggest that basic statistical learning abilities may contribute to the language learning characteristics of children with SLI. Figure 1a (left panel) displays the median response times in each block for the controls and the SLI. The plotted values are shown in the accompanying Table. Language items used for computation of language scores. Figure 1b shows the same performance plotted by 10 trial set across the blocks. Abstract Implicit learning of a visual sequence was examined in adolescents with and without specific language impairment using a serial response task. Participants were presented with an array of 4 boxes in which an object could appear. They were to push a button associated with the box as soon as they saw the object. Blocks of trials were arranged such that the object either appeared randomly or according to a pattern. Response times for correct trials showed that responses for both groups improved in the trial blocks containing the pattern. Adolescents with SLI were slower across all conditions, but also showed slower learning rates during the pattern learning in comparison to the controls. The results suggest that mechanisms involved with implicit learning may account for some of the language learning problems of individuals with SLI. Acknowledgement This study was supported by contract NIH-DC from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders and clinical research center grant P0-DC-02748, also from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. Language development reflects adaptive changes to complex network(s) in response to linguistic and nonlinguistic exposure. The nature of these networks in response to stimuli can be seen in short-term learning tasks. Thus, learning performance in a statistical learning task such as a serial response task should be associated with language status. Serial Reaction Time Paradigm Learner identifies the occurrence of each element of a sequentially random or sequentially structured sequence of stimuli (Nissen & Bullemer, 1987). Sequences are blocked with respect to whether they are random or conform to some form of pattern based on a rule based sequence or repeating sequence. Sequence (statistical) learning is reflected in decreased response times (RTs) during the pattern learning and increased response times in random blocks following pattern blocks. Learning in this case is demonstrated via implicit response. Question Do individuals with SLI show slower rates of learning in an SRT task than age matched controls? Hypothesis Methods Participants 43 adolescents with SLI 40 adolescents with normal language Both groups matched on Performance IQ and chronological age GroupMean Age (SD) Mean Perf. IQ (SD) Mean Lang. Composite z-score (SD) SLI14.76 (0.58) (8.1) (0.36) Contro l (0.49) (5.15) -.09 (.81) Clinical Measures Diagnosis was based on measures taken in second grade and confirmed in eighth grade. Language Diagnosis 2 language areas out of 5 below the 10 th percentile Language Diagnosis based on:PPVT-R; CREVT-Expressive Voc.; CELF-III: Recalling Sentences, Sentence Structure; Concepts and Directions, Word Structure (2 nd grd.) Formulated Sentences (8 th grd), Listening to Paragraphs, narrative production. Nonverbal IQ WISC-R All participants had performance IQ >85 RandomPatternRandom 100 trials Serial Response Task A serial response task based on Thomas & Nelson (2001) was used. Control of stimulus presentation and response recording was done via E-prime. Participants were instructed that they would see a set of four boxes. A green monster would appear in one of the boxes. Their job was to press one of four buttons on a button box as soon as the monster appeared. The buttons were arranged in the same order as the boxes and they were to press the button that went with the box. A stimulus trial consisted of one occurrence of the monster. Participants were NOT told that there was any pattern to the sequences. Brief rest break Stimulus trials were organized into blocks of 100. The trials during the first block were randomized. The next two blocks followed a pattern: 2, 4, 1, 3, 4, 2, 1, 4, 3, 1, 2, 4, 1, 3, 4, 2, 1, 4, 3, 1 ….. Within each sequence 1 and 4 occurred less frequently within each sequence (3X) than 2 and 3 (4X) Analysis Reaction times were grouped into sets of 10 trials each and a median reaction time was computed for each set. The association of language ability with rate of statistical learning was compared by use of growth curve analysis using a mixture model (Proc Mixed in SAS). Linear and quadratic properties of RT growth during the pattern blocks were modelled as random effects. The interaction of these growth parameters with the fixed effect of the composite language score provided a test of the relationship between language and statistical learning. RandomPattern Random SLI Contr l Mixed Model ParameterCoefficient p Intercept Linear Slope Quadratic Language Linear*Lang Quad*Lang The test for differences in the rate of learning during the trial sets comprising the pattern condition was performed using Proc Mixed. The results of this analysis are shown in Table 2. The test for differential learning rates involve the fixed effect tests shown in red. The first of these (Language) tests whether there was an overall difference in intercept as a function of language ability. Support for this effect was shown (p=0.001). The second test concerned the extent to which linear changes in RT were associated with language levels. No support for this effect was found (p=.56). The third growth parameter consisted of association of the quadratic component of learning and language level. Support for this effect was found (p=.04). Table 2. Results of learning curve analysis using Proc Mixed testing for parameters of intercept, slope, & quadratic and the relationship of composite language with these parameters. Fixed effects tests are shown in red. Although statistical learning appears important for language learning it is less clear whether there are individual differences in statistical learning ability and thus if variation in such a trait can account for individual differences in language development especially those comprising SLI. Individual Differences in Statistical Learning Reber (1993) has proposed that implicit learning of which statistical learning is a special case, is largely invariant across individuals. A part of this invariance was even found across developmental level. Evidence of developmental invariance has been shown by Howard & Howard (1992) Meulemans et al. (1998). Also implicit learning appears to be preserved in several forms of progressive brain disease such as Alzheimers disease (Reber et al., in press) amnesia (Knowlton & Squire, 1996), closed-head injury (McDowall & Martin, 1996). Evidence for individual differences in implicit learning can also be found. Fletcher et al. (2000) examined children of varying ages and mental abilities and found individual differences in SRT learning were associated with mental age. Vicari et al. (2003) discovered that children and adolescents with dyslexia were less capable of statistical learning in a nonverbal SRT task. Cherry and Stadler (1995) found Individual differences on the SRT task have also been shown to correlate with variations in educational attainment, occupational status, and verbal ability in older adults. Results Median response times for each block within each group (SLI and Control) are shown in Figure 1a. Figure 1b. shows the same responses plotted by set. The two groups were similar during the first random condition. As expected the children with SLI were slower than the controls (Kail, 1994). During the two pattern conditions, each group demonstrated systematic decreases in response times. Also during this time, It can be seen that greater differences emerge for the two groups suggesting that the children with SLI were learning more slowly. Finally, each group slowed substantially when the second random block was presented. In fact, their performance was slower than during the initial random block suggesting an interference from the pattern learning. The data in Figure 1b show that within each group there was considerable variability.