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Imitate to Accumulate: The Relationship Between Syntactic Priming and Long-term Learning, 2019-2022
Creator
Messenger, K, University of Warwick
Branigan, H, University of Edinburgh
Buckle, L, University of Warwick
Lindsay, L, University of Edinburgh
Study number / PID
856540 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-856540 (DOI)
Data access
Open
Series
Not available
Abstract
Children’s language closely reflects their recent and long-term experiences of language. Within conversations, children often repeat the words and sentence structures that they have just heard; their vocabulary and grammatical development tends to reflect the diversity and complexity of their caregivers’ language. But little is known about how children’s short-term language experiences contribute to their longer-term language learning. Syntactic priming effects may offer a promising explanation: growing evidence suggests such effects persist and accumulate to affect language use within the same interaction and even a week later. Accounts of syntactic priming as learning predict age-related differences in the magnitude of immediate priming and cumulative learning over multiple immediate experiences of syntactic structures which should lead to long-term changes in speakers’ representations of syntactic structures. This study investigates whether children’s behaviour at different stages of development supports these predictions.
We ran two experiments examining the timecourse of experience-based effects in children at early and later stages of acquisition and a comparison adult group. Both experiments involve two testing sessions, consisting of a relatively large number of items (N=48), separated by one week. Experiment 1 assesses priming of noun phrase (NP) structures where participants take turns in describing target pictures with an experimenter who alternates between adjective-noun (AN: a blue cat) and noun-relative clause (RC: a cat that’s blue) primes. Experiment 2 tests verb phrase (VP) structures (specifically actives (a cat chased the dog) vs passives (the dog was chased by a cat)). We predicted that all groups will show immediate priming effects within sessions such that participants will produce more target structures after the same prime than after the alternative prime. We also predicted long-term effects of experience, such that participants will...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
01/03/2019 - 01/10/2022
Country
United Kingdom
Time dimension
Not available
Analysis unit
Individual
Universe
Not available
Sampling procedure
Not available
Kind of data
Numeric
Text
Data collection mode
42 three-year-olds (21 males; Age range: 2;6–3;2 years) and 39 four-year-olds (21 males; Age range: 4;3–4;9 years) with no reported developmental or language delays, and 35 adults (4 males; Age range: 18-26 years) completed Experiment 1 (NP). 39 three-year-olds (9 males; Age range: 3;3–3;9 years) and 36 five-year-olds (19 males; Age range: 5;3–5;10 years) with no reported developmental or language delays, and 43 adults (9 males; Age range: 18-23 years) completed Experiment 2 (VP). All participants were either monolingual British English speakers or were simultaneously acquiring another language but still heard English from their primary caregiver at least 80% of the time. Participants were recruited as a convenience sample through schools and nurseries in Edinburgh and Warwickshire, and through the University of Warwick and University of Edinburgh participant databases. The experimenter and participant alternated in describing pictures of objects or transitive events in a ‘Snap’ game task (Branigan et al., 2005). The experimenter described the first picture using a scripted prime sentence and revealed the participant’s target picture, which the participant then described. The experimenter and participant took turns to describe 56 pictures (48 prime-target pairs and 8 snap pairs) in each session; children completed two sessions each separated by at least one week. Each session was recorded and participants’ utterances were later transcribed and coded for syntactic form according to strict (adult like) and lenient/lax coding schemes.
Funding information
Grant number
ES/R007721/1
Access
Publisher
UK Data Service
Publication year
2023
Terms of data access
The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.