While there are always differences in children's input, it is unclear how often these differences impact language development - that is, are developmentally meaningful - and why they do (or do not) do so. We describe a new approach using computational cognitive modeling that links children's input to predicted language development outcomes, and can identify if input differences are potentially developmentally meaningful. We use this approach to investigate if there is developmentally-meaningful input variation across socio-economic status () with respect to the complex syntactic knowledge called syntactic islands. We focus on four island types with available data about the target linguistic behavior. Despite several measurable input differences for syntactic island input across SES, our model predicts this variation not to be developmentally meaningful: it predicts no differences in the syntactic island knowledge that can be learned from that input. We discuss implications for language development variability across SES.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0305000922000514 | DOI Listing |
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School of Psychology and Counselling, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
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