Statistical learning and children's emergent literacy in rural Côte d'Ivoire

Author:

Zinszer Benjamin D.1ORCID,Hannon Joelle2,Hu Anqi2,Kouadio Aya Élise3,Akpé Hermann3,Tanoh Fabrice34,Wang Madeleine1,Qi Zhenghan5,Jasińska Kaja67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Swarthmore College Swarthmore Pennsylvania USA

2. Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science University of Delaware Newark Delaware USA

3. UFR Sciences de l'Homme et de la Société Université Félix Houphouët‐Boigny Abidjan Côte d'Ivoire

4. Département Sociologie Université Peleforo Gon Coulibaly Korhogo Côte d'Ivoire

5. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

6. Haskins Laboratories New Haven Connecticut USA

7. Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development University of Toronto Toronto Canada

Abstract

AbstractStudies of non‐linguistic statistical learning (SL) have often linked performance in SL tasks with differences in language outcomes. Most of these studies have focused on Western and high‐income educational contexts, but children worldwide learn in radically different educational systems and communities, and often in a second language. In the west African nation of Côte d'Ivoire, children enter fifth grade (CM‐1) with widely varying ages and literacy skills. Across three iteratively‐developed experiments, 157 children, age 8–15 years, in rural communities in the greater‐Adzópe region of Côte d'Ivoire watched sequences of cartoon images with embedded triplet patterns on touchscreen tablets, while performing a target‐detection task. We assessed these tablet‐based adaptations of non‐linguistic visual SL and asked whether the children's individual differences in performance on the SL tasks were related to their first and second language and literacy skills. We found group‐level evidence that children used the statistical regularities in the image sequence to gradually decrease their response times, but their responses on post‐test discrimination did not reflect this learning. When evaluating the correlation between SL and language skills, individual differences related to other task demands predicted oral language skills shared by first and second languages, while SL better predicted second language print skills. These findings suggest that non‐linguistic SL paradigms can measure similar skills in Ivorian children as previous samples, but they also echo recent calls for further cross‐cultural validation, greater internal reliability, and tests for confounding variables (such as processing speed) in studies of individual differences in statistical learning.Research Highlights We iteratively adapted three visual statistical learning studies for children in rural Côte d'Ivoire. Group‐level analyses indicates that the children learn the underlying statistical regularities. Individual‐differences analyses reveal some evidence that the statistical learning measure is also correlated with task demands that may be driven by cross‐cultural differences. Like previous research, statistical learning is correlated with second language literacy, but we did not find a relationship between SL and oral language skills in first and second languages.

Funder

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology

Reference79 articles.

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