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Related Concept Videos

Language and Cognition01:27

Language and Cognition

Language serves as a bridge between ideas and communication, influencing how individuals perceive and interact with the world. Psychologists have long debated whether language shapes thought or vice versa. This discussion gained grip with Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf in the 1940s, who proposed that language determines thought, a concept known as linguistic determinism. They suggested that the vocabulary and structure of a language influence how its speakers think and perceive reality.
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Lateralization

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Learning Disabilities01:25

Learning Disabilities

Learning disabilities are cognitive disorders caused by neurological impairments that affect cognitive functions like language and reading, without indicating overall intellectual or developmental challenges. These disabilities differ from global intellectual or developmental disabilities as they are limited to distinct cognitive functions. Common learning disabilities include dysgraphia, dyslexia, and dyscalculia, each of which impacts unique aspects of learning.
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Second-Language Learning Facilitates Non-Adjacent Dependency Learning: Effects Moderated by Specific Language.

Helen Shiyang Lu1, Toben H Mintz2

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Southern California.

Cognitive Science
|May 13, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Second language (L2) learning does not uniformly boost statistical learning. Instead, L2 exposure may selectively tune learners to specific linguistic patterns, shaping cognitive mechanisms.

Keywords:
Language experienceNon‐adjacent dependencySecond‐language learningStatistical learning

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Science
  • Linguistics
  • Second Language Acquisition

Background:

  • Statistical learning enables implicit tracking of linguistic regularities.
  • The impact of second language (L2) acquisition on statistical learning remains incompletely understood.
  • Research questions whether L2 learning broadly enhances statistical sensitivity or selectively tunes it to L2 patterns.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how L2 learning influences statistical learning mechanisms.
  • To determine if L2 exposure enhances general statistical sensitivity or specific pattern recognition.
  • To examine the relationship between L2 learning and statistical learning in adult learners.

Main Methods:

  • Adult English speakers learning Mandarin or Spanish, and monolingual controls, participated.
  • Two statistical learning tasks were administered: tonal word segmentation and non-adjacent dependency (NAD) learning.
  • Tasks were completed at the start of instruction and after two academic terms.

Main Results:

  • All groups performed above chance on the tonal task, with no significant improvement over time.
  • Only Spanish learners showed increased sensitivity to non-adjacent dependencies (NADs) over time.
  • Mandarin learners did not show significant improvements in either task.

Conclusions:

  • Second language acquisition does not universally enhance statistical learning abilities.
  • L2 exposure appears to selectively modulate learners' sensitivity to specific linguistic structures.
  • The findings underscore how linguistic experience shapes fundamental statistical learning processes.