Home » Psychology news » Babies’ ability to detect complex rules in language outshines that of adults, research suggests
Babies’ ability to detect complex rules in language outshines that of adults, research suggests
September 10, 2012 by NewsBot
New research examining auditory mechanisms of language learning in babies has revealed that infants as young as three months of age are able to automatically detect and learn complex dependencies between syllables in spoken language. By contrast, adults only recognized the same dependencies when asked to actively search for them. The study also highlights the important role of basic pitch discrimination abilities for early language development.