Month: March 2024

Looking at Mental Images: Eye‐Tracking Mental Simulation During Retrospective Causal Judgment

Abstract How do people evaluate causal relationships? Do they just consider what actually happened, or do they also consider what could have counterfactually happened? Using eye tracking and Gaussian process modeling, we investigated how people mentally simulated past events to judge what caused the outcomes to occur. Participants played a virtual ball-shooting game and then—while […]

Published on March 26, 2024

Can Infants Retain Statistically Segmented Words and Mappings Across a Delay?

Abstract Infants are sensitive to statistics in spoken language that aid word-form segmentation and immediate mapping to referents. However, it is not clear whether this sensitivity influences the formation and retention of word-referent mappings across a delay, two real-world challenges that learners must overcome. We tested how the timing of referent training, relative to familiarization […]

Published on March 25, 2024

Computational Modeling of the Segmentation of Sentence Stimuli From an Infant Word‐Finding Study

Abstract Computational models of infant word-finding typically operate over transcriptions of infant-directed speech corpora. It is now possible to test models of word segmentation on speech materials, rather than transcriptions of speech. We propose that such modeling efforts be conducted over the speech of the experimental stimuli used in studies measuring infants’ capacity for learning […]

Published on March 25, 2024